Reader' s Digest Word Power is Brain Power

Reader' s Digest Word Power is Brain Power
Author: Reader's Digest
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 640
Release: 2022-03-01
Genre: Games & Activities
ISBN: 1621455610

A collection of Word Power quizzes and other fun language and grammar facts that will appeal to word nerds, knowledge hunters, and students of all ages. Want to sound smarter in business meetings? Finally beat your brainy uncle at Word Cookies? Ace that standardized test? Whatever your reasons for wanting to improve your vocabulary, you won’t find a funner way of doing so than Word Power (and yes, “funner” is really a word!). For instance, do you know what these words mean: Orthoepy – A: code. B: proper pronunciation. C: sign language. Zyzzyva – A: type of weevil. B: tricky situation. C: fertilized cell Fricassee – A: cut and stew in gravy. B: deep-fry. C: sautee with mushrooms And do know when it’s okay to use a double negative or start a sentence with “Because”? Word Power will answer all these questions and much more for hours of language fun for word nerds and grammar gurus.

The Reader's Digest Word Power® Quiz Book

The Reader's Digest Word Power® Quiz Book
Author: Reader's Digest
Publisher:
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1995
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780895778222

Each of the 52 quizzes in this collection focuses on a specific theme or area of interest, and features a list of 20 words with four possible definitions for each word. 175 color illustrations.

Reader's Digest Universal Dictionary

Reader's Digest Universal Dictionary
Author: Reader's Digest Association
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1752
Release: 1999-01-01
Genre: English language
ISBN: 9780276424199

As well as a wealth of information on words, Universal Dictionary also contains facts about things, people, places and events, and includes 120 maps.

Reader's Digest Word Power Is Brain Power

Reader's Digest Word Power Is Brain Power
Author: Reader's Digest
Publisher: Trusted Media Brands
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2022-03-01
Genre: Games & Activities
ISBN: 9781621455608

A collection of Word Power quizzes and other fun language and grammar facts that will appeal to word nerds, knowledge hunters, and students of all ages. Want to sound smarter in business meetings? Finally beat your brainy uncle at Word Cookies? Ace that standardized test? Whatever your reasons for wanting to improve your vocabulary, you won’t find a funner way of doing so than Word Power (and yes, “funner” is really a word!). For instance, do you know what these words mean: Orthoepy – A: code. B: proper pronunciation. C: sign language. Zyzzyva – A: type of weevil. B: tricky situation. C: fertilized cell Sinistral – A: from the south. B: underground. C: left-handed And do you know where to place your apostophers, when it's okay to start a sentence with “But,” and which one word, repeated eight times, makes a complete sentence? Word Power will answer all these questions and much more for hours of language fun for word nerds and grammar gurus. [Answers to the quiz above: 1) B; 2) A; 3) C.]

Reader's Digest Use Your Words

Reader's Digest Use Your Words
Author: Reader's Digest
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2019-02-05
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 162145424X

Want to feel smarter? Want to have the perfect quip at the tip of your tongue? Use Your Words combines Word Power Quizzes and Quotable Quotes from Reader's Digest, Amercia's Most Popular Magazine so you can do just that! Use Your Words is part word quiz book and part quote book, combined together in themed sections. It will be a combination of 2 of our most popular columns in Reader’s Digest Magazine—Word Power and Quotable Quotes. Quotable Quotes, as it appears today, first ran in January 1934. It was proceeded by similar quote columns, including Remarkable Remarks, which ran in the first ever issue of Reader's Digest in February 1922, and Significant Sayings, which ran in June 1922. These first columns featured the great minds of the day, including Herbert Hoover (before he became president), Lady Astor, and John D. Rockefeller. The quotes were, and continue to be, collected from a variety of books, speeches, journals, and articles. We've quoted both living and dead people. The column hasn't changed much, except for the art. It began as a one-page list of quotes and continues to be a one-page list of quotes. Quotable Quotes is second to Laughter the Best Medicine in column popularity. Word Power first ran in January 1945—January 2020 will mark 75 years. Word Power's creator, Wilfred Funk, was a poet and lexicographer—his family was the “Funk” of the reference publisher Funk & Wagnalls. He presented his quiz idea to Dewitt Wallace in 1944. Wilfred's son Peter Funk wrote the column from the 1960s to the 1990s. Current writers are a married couple who are well-known in the crossword/puzzle world: https://www.theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbound/wordgame/crbio.htm The column hasn’t changed much—it has 15 words now instead of 20. It has themed columns (car words, Italian words) rather than words based on RD. It has a sidebar that goes in-depth on something related to the theme. Word Power is our 3rd most popular column in the magazine.