English Words in Action, Group K

(a variety of English words which have developed through history and are currently used in our modern age)

English vocabulary quizzes in random order from easy to more difficult for greater word skills.

Simply click on this banner (or the following link) and you will be on your way to stimulate your brain for greater word comprehension with quizzes based on some of the words in this unit.

kaleidoscopic (adjective), more kaleidoscopic, most kaleidoscopic
A reference to continually shifting from one set of relations or conditions to another one: The climate has been more kaleidoscopic in Sam's area than in other places.
keen (adjective), more keen, most keen
1. Sharp and finely honed: The knife was old, but the blade had a keen edge.
2. Being wholehearted, eager, and enthusiastic: Lawrence and his family were keen about going to the picnic this afternoon.
3. Used to describe a discriminating, acute, and passionate attitude about something: Sharan has a keen appreciation of art works and so she goes to various exhibitions whenever she can.
keep (s) (noun), keeps (pl)
1. Subsistence, daily food and lodgings, and comforts: Aaron was able to pay for his keep by doing odd jobs.
2. Part of a castle, stronghold, or fortress: The ruins of the medieval keep are still standing after hundreds of years.
3. Etymology: in the sense of "stronghold inside a castle" is a translation of Italian tenezza, "keep, stronghold, donjon" (fortified main tower of a castle), and was introduced by Sir Philip Sidney into English in his classic romance of 1590 titled Arcadia.
keep (verb), keeps; kept; keeping
1. To hold or to retain an object or idea in one's possession: Laurie wants to keep all of the gifts her uncle gave to her on her birthday.
2. To support, preserve, or ensure the future of: Susana wanted to keep her family name when she got married.
3. To maintain, to make provision for, or to care for: Sabina agreed to keep her niece for a week while her parents went on a business trip.
4. To protect, hold back, or to prevent the movement of someone or something: The police officers were told to keep everyone away from the accident!
5. To proceed, to continue, to move in a direction: Please, keep moving to the entrance.
6. To go along with, to observe, to maintain: Elva and Alfred want to keep the religious holidays.
7. Etymology: from Old English cepan, "to observe, to see, to comply with".
keeper (KEE puhr) (s) (noun), keepers (pl)
1. Someone who is responsible for the care and upkeep of animals; a games warden: Only the keeper was allowed to be in the animal cages.
2. A person who is a guardian, custodian, or curator for objects: Helene was the keeper of the art collection for her uncle.
3. Custodian, protector, nurse, or a provider of care and supervision: Glenda ended up being her brother's keeper after he was seriously injured during an auto accident.
ken (s) (noun) (no plural)
Knowledge or perception beyond a person's understanding: Sharon's students complained about the complex issues of the vocabulary she was presenting, which were way beyond their ken or range of knowledge.
Mental perception or range of understanding.
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Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.

kid (adjective) (no comparatives)
Relating to a younger person than another member of a family: Sam's kid brother will be graduating from high school this year.

Gertrud's kid sister will be having her birthday party this week and her kid brother will have his celebration next month.

kid (s) (noun), kids (pl)
1. A child or a young person: Karen took her kids to the park to go for a walk.
2. Young goats: On the farm, Jim saw several mother goats with their kids.

There are those who object to the use of the term kid or kids for youngsters and say: "Kids are young goats and so children should NOT be referred to as kids; unless they behave like young goats!"

3. Etymology: from Middle English kide and from Old Norse kidh, "a young goat" or a similar animal; such as "an antelope"; then, the informal slang-term came into existence for "a child" or "a young person" to be called kids.

Kids Say the Funniest Things

There are elementary school teachers who apparently agree with that title, because they keep journals of amusing things their students have written in papers as shown in the following list:

  • The future tense of "I give" is "I take".
  • The parts of speech are lungs and air.
  • A census taker is man who goes from house to house increasing the population.
  • Water is composed of two gins. Oxygin and hydrogin. Oxygin is pure gin. Hydrogin is gin and water.
  • The definitions of H2O and CO2: H2O is hot water and CO2 is cold water.
  • Most of the houses in France are made of plaster of Paris.
  • The spinal column is a long bunch of bones where the head sits on the top and you sit on the bottom.
  • We do not raise silk worms in the United States, because we get our silk from rayon who is a larger worm and gives more silk.
  • One of the main causes of dust is janitors.
  • One by-product of raising cattle is calves.
  • The four seasons are salt, pepper, mustard, and vinegar.
  • The word trousers is an uncommon noun because it is singular at the top and plural at the bottom.
  • Syntax is all the money collected at a church from sinners.
  • The blood circulates through the body by flowing down one leg and up the other.
  • Iron was discovered because someone smelt it.
  • The law of gravity says no fair jumping up without coming back down.
  • A vibration is a motion that can't make up it's mind which way it wants to go.
  • I'm not sure how clouds are formed, but clouds know how to do it, and that's the important part.
  • Water vapor gets together in a cloud, then when it gets big enough to drop, it does.
  • Rain is saved up in cloud banks.
—Compiled from excerpts that were presented on
the radio program, "Car Talk" by Prissy Lee, 2004.
kid (verb), kids; kidded; kidding
To say something as a joke; including making someone believe that which is not true: Jack thought Shirley was kidding him when she said she would marry him.

Jack responded by saying, "Are you trying to kid me?"

Shirley answered, "Jack, I kid you not; let's do it. No, I'm only kidding you!"

kidder (s) (noun), kidders (pl)
Someone who likes to joke about things and who can be difficult to believe even when he or she is serious about something; a teaser: Karen thought Gerard was just being a kidder when he said that just one serving of the dessert was enough.

Sometimes politicians are considered to be nothing more than kidders who should not be taken seriously when they make promises to improve this or that situation for the people.

klutz (s) (noun), klutzes (pl)
A person who often falls down, drops things, etc.: Jerome admits that he is a klutz and quite clumsy; especially, when he is dancing.
A foolish or stupid person.
© ALL rights are reserved.

Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.

knee-jerk (adjective), more knee-jerk, most knee-jerk
Reacting automatically and without thought: The politician made a knee-jerk reaction by using a vulgar term when a reporter asked him the same question again.

The term, knee-jerk, often has a negative connotation; such as, being too-hasty, to impulsive, and perhaps even being an irrational or unacceptable response.

kopje (KAHP ee), koppie (KAHP ee), kop (KAHP) (s) (noun); kopjes, koppies, kops (pl)
1. Used in South Africa, Tanzania, and perhaps in some other African countries; a small hill or mound: The fig tree that served for decades as a lion scratching post was on a kopje, one of the isolated piles of rocks in the grasslands that are popular lion haunts.
2. Etymology: Kop is a hill or a headland; from Afrikaans which came from Dutch, "a head" and kopje also came from Afrikaans, a diminutive (small form) of Dutch, kop, "hill".

Links to all of the groups of English words in action, Groups A to Z.

You may see the bibliographic list of sources of information for these words in action.