Photo by Andrew Saliga
Pass the Gatorade! Martha and Grant work up a sweat in this episode as they tackle a sports quiz and lob vocabulary questions back and forth. They also settle a family dispute about the pronunciation of eco-friendly and unlock the etymology of skeleton key.
This episode originally aired Dec. 1st and 2nd, 2007.
Listen here:
Download the MP3 here (23.5MB).
Do you know what a rampike is? Or a colobus? Martha and Grant test each other’s knowledge of ten-dollars words with the online quiz at FreeRice.com.
A reader of Anthony Bourdain’s Kitchen Confidential thinks the book is snarky—but what does snarky really mean?
A husband and wife ask for wisdom about a long-running dispute: Is it last-stitch effort or last-ditch effort?
Greg Pliska’s quiz about terms from football, curling, and other sports leaves Martha and Grant winded but wanting more.
How do you pronounce eco, as in eco-friendly? Is it EE-koe or EK-koe? A seller of environmentally friendly products learns whether she can tell her teenage son to go spread his pronunciation in the garden.
A Wisconsinite hopes to unlock the question, “Why do we call it a skeleton key?”
A caller in Texas stirs up a spat over whether it’s ever grammatically correct to say between you and I—even though Shakespeare did it.
This week’s “Slang This!” contestant guesses what the terms tape bomb and pixie money mean. Improvised explosive devices made out of cassette tapes? We don’t think so.
If you release a collection of music on compact disc, can you still call it a record or an album? Or is it just a CD? A musician from Indiana wants an answer.
Finally, to great effect, your unaffected radio hosts explain the difference between affect and effect.
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