Nicola here. This weekend we took part in our local village charity quiz, fifteen teams trying to answer questions on everything from the names of Disney princesses to Olympic swimming champions. Amazingly, we won - as a team we knew a lot of obscure, random general knowledge! - plus we raised some money and enjoyed an evening out with friends and neighbours. It was all very good humoured, unlike some of the quizzes I've been involved with where professional teams got very irate if they didn't win!
I’ve always liked the word “quiz.” It's got a fun feel to it, and, being a writer, I've often wondered where the word originated from. I remember it featuring in Georgette Heyer, but as a description of a person rather than an activity. So I set out to find out more.
According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary the origin of the word “quiz” is uncertain. There is a popular story that in the late 18th century the Irish theatre manager James Daly made a wager that he could invent a word that had no meaning and get the entire city of Dublin talking about it. He chalked or pasted up the letters Q,U,I,Z on the walls around the city and soon everybody was speculating about what they could mean. Thus, he won the bet and the word entered English slang, meaning an eccentric, odd person. The theatre in the photo is Dublin's Theatre Royal (copyright National Library of Ireland) which was originally founded back in the 17th century.
The theatre anecdote is a good story and it appeared in a number of newspapers and magazines in the 19th century but there’s no proof of it and in fact the word had first appeared in print about 10 years before Daly made his supposed wager when Fanny Burney used it in one of her novels. So by the 1780s it was already well known and probably had been used in speech quite frequently. So we probably need to look elsewhere for the origins of the word. Other suggestions that have been put forward are that actually it derives from the same place as inquisitive and inquisition, which makes sense when you think it has connotations of a curious person or someone asking lots of questions. Apparently it was also the tradition in English boys’ grammar schools in the 18th and 19th century to start tests on literary and historical characters with the Latin word “quis” meaning “who.” The whole test would be in Latin, of course, and you can see how they might become known as quizzes.
Whatever the case, from the late 1700s the noun "a quiz" had come to mean an odd or eccentric person, as in: “He was not odd – no quiz – yet he resembled no one else I had ever seen before.” (The Professor, Charlotte Bronte.) It could also be used to describe an object that was a bit strange, such as: “Where did you get that quiz of a hat?” A s one character asks another in Northanger Abbey.
The same era gives us the the “quizzing glass," which was an aid to vision, particularly a monocle, designed for examining something or someone very closely. Regency romances abound with usually elderly men and women peering at people through their quizzing glasses or dandies affecting to be outrageous by carrying a monocle.
Oddly at the same time that Quiz became a word, there was also the word “Quoz, ” which also meant an eccentric person, just as Quiz did. In fact there was some argument over which was the correct term! Interestingly, quoz has died out of use but quiz has survived to the present day.
Like many words, “quiz” started to change and develop different meanings over time. To quiz someone came to mean ask them questions or banter with them, which takes us back to being inquisitive, but with joking overtones. The word “quizzical” came along to mean “questioning” in a teasing way. Jane Austen talks about “a great deal of stupid quizzing and commonplace nonsense” in one of her letters; She doesn’t approve of such banter without real wit. Charles Dickens also uses it to describe someone who makes jokes and Sir Walter Scott uses the word to describe something light-hearted and nonsensical.
These days, to quiz most usually means to question someone in detail on a particular topic. A quiz can be a simple series of questions or a game show with huge prize
money at stake. This sort of quiz grew popular in the early 20th century. The first programme was in 1928 when a US quiz show called “Jack Says Ask Me Another” made its debut. After that, radio and TV quiz shows became mass entertainment. As a child in the 1970s I loved Ask The Family, Brain of Britain and many more. University Challenge was usually too tough and specialised for me!
Here on the Word Wenches we love a good quiz and Wench Anne has created some fun ones! Are you a quiz fan? Do you take part in them, or enjoy watching or listening to them? Any favourite quiz shows?