Make sure the "Notify me about new quizzes" is enabled in your Dashboard.
Tricky II
Welcome to the deep end of office spelling. This round is for words that follow a rule most people never learned, plus a few that follow no rule at all. Why does "occurred" double its "r" while plenty of other words don't? When do you write "judgment" without that extra "e"? And how on earth do you spell "liaison"? If you've ever typed one of these and stared at it, unsure, this quiz is for you. You'll hear each word and pick the correct spelling, and the explanations break down the logic so it finally makes sense, not just for these words but for the next ones like them.
The lineup is a who's who of hard workplace words: exaggerate, acknowledgment, judgment, occurred, referred, transferred, committed, permitted, recommendation, and liaison. Many of them share one neat pattern: when a word is stressed on its last syllable and ends in a single vowel plus a single consonant, you double that consonant before adding the ending, which is why it's "referred" and "committed." Learn that one rule and a whole family of words clicks into place. The explanations also flag the US spellings, like "judgment" without the middle "e." You'll meet these words in formal writing, legal and HR documents, and detailed reports, where precision really counts. Finish this one and you can call yourself a genuinely confident speller. Don't be discouraged if a few slip past you on the first run. These are genuinely advanced words, and even strong spellers miss some, which is exactly why a focused round like this is worth the effort. Come back to it once or twice and watch your score climb.
Make sure the "Notify me about new quizzes" is enabled in your Dashboard.
Quiz-Tree