Minds & Mortality
Personal Space · Psychopathy · Eschatology
Exercise 1: Match the Word to Its Meaning
Click a word on the left, then click its meaning on the right.
Word
Meaning
Exercise 2: Match the Idiom or Phrase
Match each idiom on the left with its meaning on the right.
Idiom / Phrase
Meaning
Exercise 3: Type the Word
Read each definition and type the vocabulary word it describes.
Exercise 4: Drag & Drop — Vocabulary in Context
Drag the words from the bank into the sentences. Tap a word on mobile, then tap the drop zone.
📚 Vocabulary Bank — Drag the words below:
1.On a crowded bus, it is advisable to walk [ Drop here ] so as not to bump into other passengers.
2.His cold [ Drop here ] towards the victims revealed clear psychopathic tendencies.
3.She tends to [ Drop here ] resentment for years without ever confronting the person.
4.A nervous twitch in the eye is often a [ Drop here ] sign that someone is lying.
5.Their sitting so close added some [ Drop here ] to an otherwise formal first date.
6.Should you sense the other person is uneasy, consider [ Drop here ]ing a step.
7.Politicians often [ Drop here ] risks to avoid public panic before an election.
8.If the spy had leaked the message, the whole military unit would have been [ Drop here ].
9.I was taken aback by the [ Drop here ] of her response to such a minor invasion of space.
10.Many people [ Drop here ] for redemption only when they sense death approaching.
11.A moral [ Drop here ], however small, weighs heavily on a functioning conscience.
12.He felt no [ Drop here ] whatsoever — a classic warning sign.
13.Psychopaths often [ Drop here ] normal emotions to blend in socially.
14.It is essential to [ Drop here ] of another person's desire to set boundaries.
Watch out: deify ≠ defy · empathy ≠ sympathy · apathy ≠ callousness · mortal ≠ mortify.
Exercise 5: Easily Confused Words
Choose the option that best fits each context.
1.To ______ orders is to go against them.
2.His complete lack of ______ makes him unable to feel what others feel.
3.The total ______ of the planet is the theme of most apocalyptic fiction.
4.Celebrities should not be ______; nobody is perfect.
5.Her political ______ worried her colleagues — she simply did not care.
6.A ______ drug prevents disease before symptoms appear.
7.He accidentally became an ______ violator of personal space on the bus.
8.Every ______ being must one day confront death.
Pattern: Should + subject + bare infinitive, + main clause.
Example: If you talk to him, you will notice his behaviour → Should you talk to him, you will notice his behaviour.
Exercise 6: Hypothetical Should-Inversion
Rewrite each conditional using formal Should-inversion. Drop if and invert subject and verb.
1.If you talk to him, you will notice that he invades personal space. (Use Should-inversion)
2.If he comes one step closer, there will be no room for me. (Use Should-inversion)
3.If fear of death clouds your judgment, you won't make rational choices. (Use Should-inversion)
4.If you meet a psychopath, do not try to reason with them. (Use Should-inversion)
5.If the patient receives a prophylactic, the symptoms may subside. (Use Should-inversion, start with Should the patient…)
Exercise 7: Word Formation — Noun / Verb / Adjective
Transform the word in orange into the correct form for each sentence.
1.He felt a deep (remorseful) after the incident.
2.Her (callous) towards strangers was chilling.
3.The monk claimed to have achieved (transcend) through silent meditation.
4.A (prophecy) warning came just before the disaster.
5.To (deity) a mortal leader is historically dangerous.
6.The child (mortal) rate has fallen dramatically.
7.They had to (atonement) for their transgressions.
8.The complete (annihilate) of trust took only minutes.
Exercise 8: Idioms in Context
Choose the idiom that completes each sentence.
1.When fear of death ______ your judgment, you make irrational decisions.
2."We're all just dust in the ______" — life is fleeting.
3.One day we will all meet our ______.
4.The dictator finally kicked the ______ after decades of rule.
5.Try not to ______ feathers at the family dinner.
6.If you sense she is uncomfortable, you should ______.
7.Please ______ of the warning signs before entering the enclosure.
8.He continues to ______ a grudge, though years have passed.
Watch: vulnerable to · believe in · argue with · turn 62 on Saturday · so as not to.
Exercise 9: Correct the Preposition
Each sentence is missing or uses a wrong preposition. Rewrite the full sentence correctly.
Ink Blitz — Writing Challenge
Write a short paragraph (6–8 sentences) exploring how personal boundaries, moral conscience, and awareness of mortality shape human behaviour. Include at least 5 vocabulary words from the lesson, 2 idioms, 1 hypothetical Should-inversion, and one contrast between similar words (e.g. deify / defy, empathy / sympathy).
N
E
R
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Word Origin
Naturally Eccentric, Remarkably Different
Word Origin
Naturally Eccentric, Remarkably Different
| Word / Phrase | Category | Origin & Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Eschatology | etymology | From Greek eschatos ('last, furthest') + -logy ('study of'). Literally 'the study of last things' — death, judgment, afterlife, and the final fate of humanity. Coined in 19th-century theology from ancient Greek roots. |
| Mortify | etymology | From Latin mortificare — mors ('death') + facere ('to make'). Originally meant 'to cause death' in medieval theology — mortifying the flesh meant subduing bodily desires. The modern sense of 'to embarrass deeply' comes from the idea of emotional death — one wishes to die of shame. |
| Annihilate | etymology | From Latin ad nihilum — 'to nothing'. Nihil = 'nothing'. To annihilate is literally to reduce something to nothing — complete, total, irreversible destruction. |
| Transcend | etymology | From Latin trans- ('across, beyond') + scandere ('to climb'). To transcend is to climb beyond — to rise above ordinary limits, whether physical, intellectual, or spiritual. |
| Prophylactic | etymology | From Greek prophylaktikos — pro- ('before') + phylax ('guard'). Something that 'guards in advance' — prevents disease or harm before it can occur. |
| Empathy vs Sympathy | grammar | Both from Greek pathos ('feeling'). Empathy (em- = 'into') is feeling into another person — understanding their emotion from the inside, as if experiencing it yourself. Sympathy (syn- = 'with') is feeling with them — pity or sorrow from a distance. Psychopaths are defined by the absence of the first, not necessarily the second. |
| Deify vs Defy | grammar | Deify ([DEE-uh-fy]) — from Latin deus ('god'). To make someone a god; to worship. Defy ([dih-FY]) — from Latin diffidare ('to renounce faith'). To resist, to go against. One letter, one syllable — opposite meanings. Writers confuse them; speakers rarely do. |
| Embezzle | etymology | From Anglo-French enbesiler — 'to steal, make off with'. Specifically refers to stealing money or property that has been entrusted to you by an employer or organisation. Ordinary theft requires force; embezzlement requires only access and dishonesty. |
| Callous | etymology | From Latin callus — 'hardened skin'. Originally described skin thickened by repeated friction. Metaphorically extended to emotions: a callous person has let feelings grow hardened from repeated exposure, so that suffering no longer reaches them. |
| Remorse | etymology | From Latin remordere — re- ('again') + mordere ('to bite'). Remorse is guilt that bites you back — the past returning to gnaw at the conscience. Psychopaths, famously, feel no bite. |
| Intimacy | etymology | From Latin intimus — 'innermost', a superlative of interior. Intimacy is the innermost closeness between people — emotional or physical — that is reserved for the very few. |
| Kick the bucket | idiom | A grimly literal origin: in old English slaughterhouses, a pig was hung by its hind legs from a wooden beam called a bucket (from Old French buquet). Its dying spasms caused it to kick this beam. Now a jocular euphemism for dying. |
| Meet one's maker | idiom | A Judeo-Christian phrase — 'maker' here means God the Creator. To meet one's maker is to die and face divine judgment. Often used with gentle irony or gallows humour. |
| Dust in the wind | idiom | Echoes Ecclesiastes ('dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return') and Genesis. Popularised in modern speech by the 1977 Kansas song. Expresses the fleeting, insignificant nature of human life against the vastness of time. |
| Cloud one's judgment | idiom | A metaphor from meteorology — clouds obscure vision. When fear, anger, or desire clouds your judgment, they obscure the clarity of thought needed to make rational decisions. |
| Back off | idiom | A spatial metaphor made personal — to physically step back, and by extension, to stop pressing, intruding, or challenging. Used both as a calm request ('please back off') and a sharp warning ('back off!'). |
| Ruffle feathers | idiom | Birds puff and disarrange their feathers when threatened or angry. To ruffle someone's feathers is to upset or annoy them — the idiom evokes visible, bristling irritation rather than deep offence. |
| Take heed | idiom | Heed comes from Old English hedan — 'to observe, attend to'. The noun now survives almost entirely in this phrase. To take heed is to pay careful attention, especially to a warning. |
| Should-inversion | grammar | Formal British English replaces If you should talk to him with Should you talk to him — dropping if and inverting subject and verb. Used for hypothetical present/future conditions. Tone: formal, literary, or bureaucratic. Pattern: Should + subject + bare infinitive, + main clause. |