Friday, November 8, 2019

Homeschool Spelling Bee January 27



This year's homeschool Spelling Bee will be held at Village Home Education Resource Center on January 27, 2020. 

Two Spelling Bees


The regular Spelling Bee is open to all homeschool/unschool learners grades 4-8. Don't know what grade you are in? Go by age: 9-15 is the age range for participation. Anyone will not be past grade 8 or age 15 by August 31, 2020 is eligible.
There is also a Junior Bee for learners up through grade 3 (age 8).

Registration is FREE!

The winner of the regular Spelling Bee will compete in the Regional Spelling Bee, held in early March, and sponsored by the Portland Tribune. The winner of the Regional Bee will be awarded a trip to Washington DC to compete in the National Spelling Bee! Village Home has had four champions go on to Washington DC, and two of them have earned National Semifinalist status!

Find full information for the Bee at Village Home's Bee Page. You can also find a full list of the Study Words at that page.

Register for the Bee at this link by January 24, 2020.

Any questions? Email bees@villagehome.org


Sunday, November 3, 2019

Broken Words

BeeHive Spelling Question: Can you name one of the questions a speller can ask at a Spelling Bee?

BeeHive Geography Question: What is the difference between a Commonwealth and a State in the United States?

Did you know that some words in English are split up in the wrong place? Words can be made of bits glued together, and then sometimes they break apart at places they weren't meant to break at. Here are ten of them

app
"App" is short for application. Computers and tablets and phones have small programs called "apps" meaning they are programs that can be applied to different tasks. But did you know that there's a glue line between p and p? The word comes down from Latin applicatio, which is ap plus plicatio (based on the root plica, "fold"). 

copter
Ask someone what helicopter is made from, and they'll probably say heli plus copter. But actually it's helico- ("spiral") plus pter ("wing"), same as in pterodactyl, "wing finger". Obviously nobody says it like "helico-pter"! 

demo
The glue line in this word comes after the de. You may know de as meaning "from" or signifying the reversal of an action. In this case, in the original Latin it actually meant "completely" and was tacked onto the root monstra- ("show") to make it stronger. So why we wouldn't break demonstration after the n rather than the o? Because breaking after the n would make demon — which just wouldn't sound right!

prep
This word is just preparing to say preparation. But the glue line is after pre, which is from Latin for "before." The rest is from the Latin para- root, which means "make ready," but is clearly not fully ready in this word. When we say it, we actually say the p at the start of the next syllable, like we do in prepare, but in preparation we have a short vowel so we think of it as a short syllable, which means we think of the p as stuck to the previous syllable. And the rest breaks away.

decal
A lot has come unstuck from this word — but it's still stuck together at the glue line. In English we shortened it from decalcomania, which came from French décalcomanie, a mania for tracing things, from de plus calquer ("trace") plus, of course, manie. We peeled most of this word off but, like a stubborn decal, some of it stayed stuck on.

-aholic
Workaholic, shopaholic, whatever: we know -aholic means it's an addiction. But while addiction can make for broken people, in this case it makes a broken word, too. Alcoholic is of course from alcohol plus icalcohol, for its part, comes from Arabic al kuhl, with al meaning "the" and kuhl referring to a kind of eye makeup. Yeah, the meaning has shifted a little, too...

perm
A perm is meant to hold permanently (or at least for a long time). Permafrost is permanently frozen. But the word permanent hasn't been so lucky. Once again, the little handle on the word — in this case, the prefix per ("thoroughly") — holds together while the manent, from the Latin root mane- ("remain"), is mostly gone. 

comp
If someone promised you comp (free) tickets, you'd be unhappy if you just got the stub, right? But with comp, that's all you do get — and it's like one of those tickets where it's been torn not at the dotted line but a bit farther in. Comp comes from complimentary, which comes from compliment (originally referring to a courtesy), which comes from Latin com ("with"; used as an intensifier) plus plementum, from the verb plere ("fill"). Did you notice how that's spelled plem and not plim? Guess what: they come from the same source, but compliment came by way of French in the 1600s, while we got complement from Latin a bit earlier. I'm giving you that extra info for free!

info
So how do you like your comp info? Is it informing you of the forms in the words? You know, of course, that info is short for information (look, another word breaking off at the o like demo!). You may or may not have ever stopped to notice that information is from in plus form plus ation. To inform someone is to shape their knowledge — to put it in form. Or, for the short version, in fo.

nickname
There are also some words we don't think of as shortened at all — because something got stuck to them accidentally and we've just assumed it was always there. An alternative name was originally an eke-name, but people hearing "an eke-name" came to think it was "a nekename," and that in turn came to be heard as "a nickname." So it stole the n from the an — like something sticky just set down for a moment that takes something with it when it's picked up. An ewt became a newt the same way. Incidentally, an orange, an apron, and an adder used to be a norange, a napron, and a nadder — but that's a whole nother thing.

Thanks to The Week for this great information!


Answers to BeeHive Questions


Spelling: The questions you can ask at a Spelling Bee are:

  • What is the language of origin?
  • Please use the word in a sentence.
  • What is the meaning of the word?
  • Please repeat the word.
  • Are there alternate pronunciations of the word?
  • What is the part of speech of the word?
Geography: Trick question! In the United States, the only difference between a state and a commonwealth is the actual name. States that have "commonwealth" as part of their name (like Massachusetts) have exactly the same rights and privileges as any other state.