Once upon a time, in a galaxy far, far away,
I had way too much time on my hands and, despite my variety of hobbies, I found myself unaccountably bored. What
better, I thought, than to wade through my Collins Concise English Dictionary and make a list of words of which I had never
heard!
Yes, I really did this.
Yes, I know: I am a very, very sad person.
No, don't write to bully me about
it - I had enough of that at school!
Anyway, as "Reader's Digest" says: "It pays to enrich your
word power"! I might be sad enough to have a look at the entire Oxford English dictionary one day -
probably not until about twenty years time when I retire though. So if you have heard of any interesting words that
are not listed here, by all means send me an e-mail!
- Amanuensis: Literary assistant
- Anachronism: Something/someone out of harmony with a time period
- Anthropocentric: Regarding man as centre of existence
- Anthropomorphism: Attribution of human form to god, animal or thing
- Antonym: Word opposite in meaning to another
- Aphasia: Partial or total loss of speech - i.e. "Phased"!
- Aphorism: Short, pithy maxim.
- Apophthegm: Terse or pithy saying
- Apostacy: Renunciation of a belief once held
- Arcadian: Ideally rustic; one who leads simple, rustic life
- Atavism: Resemblance to remote ancestors rather than parents
- Autochthonous: Indigenous, aboriginal
- Axiom: Established or accepted principle; self-evident truth
- Baksheesh: Gratuity, tip, (Persian)
- Bathos: Unintentional lapse in mood from the sublime to the absurd or trivial
- Bellicose: Eager to Fight; warlike
- Benthanism: Belief in greatest happiness, or greatest number as a guiding principle of ethics; philosophy based on this
- Blitzkrieg: Intensive campaign of war intended to bring about a swift victory
- Bohemian: Socially unconventional
- Borborygmus: Rumbly tummy noises!
- Bucolic: Of shepherds, rustic, pastoral
- Byzantine: Inflexible, underhand
- Cabal: Secret intrigue, political clique
- Callipygous: having shapely buttocks
- Calumniate: Slander, defame
- Calumny: Slander; malicious representation
- Canard: Unfounded rumour or story
- Cant: Insincere pious or moral talk; language peculiar to one class of people; jargon
- Cantabile: In smooth, flowing style
- Capitulate: Surrender, esp. on stated conditions
- Captious: Fond of finding fault; raising petty objections
- Carminative: Curing flatulence
- Catachresis: Incorrect use of words
- Catamite: The passive partner in homosexual practices
- Categorical: Unconditional, absolute, explicit
- Catharsis: Emotional release in drama or art; purgation
- Cavil: Take exception (at); carp; find fault; petty objection
- Celidh: Informal gathering for music, dancing, etc
- Chiaroscuro: Treatment of light and shade in painting; contrast in literature
- Chicanery: Clever but misleading talk, trickery, deception
- Chryselephantine: made of, or overlaid with, gold and ivory
- Circadian: Occurring about once a day
- Circumlocution: Roundabout expression, evasive talk, verbosity
- Cicatrix: Scar tissue
- Cladistics: Study of connections between animal species by analysis of their common features
- Colloquy: Talk, conversation
- Comestibles: Things to eat
- Concatenate: Link together, form sequence of
- Concupiscence: Intense sexual desire
- Confrere: Fellow member of profession
- Consanguineous: Descended from same ancestor; kin
- Crepuscular: Of twilight; dim; not yet fully enlightened.
- Croesus: Person of great wealth
- Curmudgeon: Bad tempered person
- Cynosure: Centre of attraction or admiration
- Daguerreotype: Early photograph using chemically treated plate
- Deliquesce: Become liquid; melt; dissolve in moisture from air
- Dendrochronology: Chronology by study of tree growth rings
- Desideratum: Thing that is lacking but needed or desired
- Dichotomy: Division into two parts or kinds
- Dilettante: One who dabbles in subject without serious study of it
- Dionysian: Sensual, wild, unrestrained
- Dirigible: Capable of being guided
- Discombobulated: Confused
- Doppelganger: Wraith of living person
- Draconian: Very harsh; cruel
- Ebullition: Sudden outburst of passion or emotion; boiling
- Ebullient: Exuberant, high spirited
- Eclectic: Selecting ideas or beliefs from various sources
- Ectomorph: A slim person!
- Egalitarian: Of or advocating equal rights for all
- Egregious: Outstandingly bad
- Eldritch: Weird, hideous
- Elysium: Abode of the blessed after death
- Encomium: Formal or high-flown praise
- Endomorph: Person with soft round build of body
- Ennui: Mental weariness; feeling of boredom
- Ephemeral: Lasting or living only a day; transitory
- Epistemology: Theory of method or grounds of knowledge
- Eructation: Belching
- Eschatology: Doctrine of death and afterlife
- Etymology: Origin and development of words
- Euphemism: Use of mild or indirect expression instead of blunt one
- Evanescent: Quickly fading
- Exegesis: Explanation
- Existentialism: Philosophical theory emphasising existence of the individual as free and responsible agent determining his own development
- Exonerate: Free or declare free from blame
- Fabian: Cautiously persistent; aiming at gradual social change
- Fecund: Prolific, fertile; fertilising
- Floccinaucinihilipilification: The above is the longest word in the English language but is not in many dictionaries!
- Fulminate: Express censure loudly and forcefully; explode violently; flash like lightening
- Galvanic: Producing an electrical current by chemical action; stimulating; full of energy; sudden and remarkable
- Garrulous: Talkative
- Grandiloquent: Pompous or inflated in language
- Hades: (Greek myth.) - the underworld; abode of the dead
- Halycon: Calm and peaceful; happy and prosperous
- Harangue: Lengthy and earnest speech
- Hebdomadal: Weekly
- Hedonism: Belief in pleasure as the proper aim
- Heuristic: Serving or helping to find out or discover; proceeding by trial and error
- Histrionic: Dramatic or theatrical in manner or to impress others
- Hyperbole: Statement exaggerated for special effect
- Iambus: Metrical foot
- Icthyology: Study of fishes
- Iconoclast: One who assails cherished beliefs
- Ignominious: Humiliating
- Imbroglio: Complicated or confused situation
- Impecunious: Having little or no money
- Incorporeal: Without substance or material existence
- Incubus: Oppressive person or thing; evil spirit
- Isochronous: Occupying equal time; occurring at same time
- Isomorphic: Substance having same form as another
- Jingoism: Blustering patriotism; supporter of bellicose(qv) policy
- Jurisprudence: Science or philosophy of law
- Juxtapose: Put side by side
- Kinematic: Of motion considered abstractly without reference to force or mass
- Kleptomania: Abnormal urge to steal
- Lachrymose: Given to crying; tearful
- Laconic: Terse, using few words
- Lammas: First day of August
- Laodicean: Lacking zeal, esp. in religion or politics
- Lascivious: Lustful; inciting to lust
- Lassitude: Languor, disinclination to exert or interest oneself
- Lattitudinarian: Liberal, esp. in religion
- Legerdemain: Slight of hand; trickery; sophistry; juggling
- Leviathan: Anything very large or powerful
- Lexical: Of the words of a language
- Lexicography: Compiling of dictionaries
- Lexis: Words, vocabulary; total stock of words in a language
- Ligneous: Of the nature of wood; woody
- Lilliputian: Diminutive person or thing
- Lingua franca: Language used by speakers whose native languages are different
- Lubricity: Skill in evasion; lewdness; slipperiness
- Luddite: Person engaged in seeking to obstruct progress
- Lugubrious: Doleful
- Machiavellian: Elaborately cunning; deceitful, perfidious
- Macrocosm: Universe; any great whole
- Malapropism: Ludicrous misuse of word, i.e. mistaking it for one sounding similar
- Malthusianism: Doctrine that population should be restricted to prevent increase beyond means of subsistence
- Mendacious: Untruthful, lying
- Mephistophelean: Fiendish
- Meritocracy: Government by persons selected for merit
- Mesomorph: Person with muscular, compact body build
- Metaphysics: Theoretical philosophy of existence and knowledge
- Micturition: Urination
- Misanthrope: One who avoids human society; hater of mankind
- Misogynist: One who hates all women
- Myopia: Short sighted
- Myrmidon: Hired ruffian, base servant
- Naevus: Birthmark in form of sharply defined red mark in skin
- Narcissism: Abnormal self-love or self-admiration
- Narcosis: Insensible state; induction of this
- Necessitarianism: Denial of free will and belief that all action is determined by causes
- Nepotism: Favouritism shown to relatives in conferring offices
- Nescient: Not having knowledge of
- Neuralgia: Intense intermittent pain in nerves, esp.of face and head
- Nictitate: Blink, wink
- Noblesse oblige: Privilege entails responsibility
- Obfuscate: Obscure or confuse, stupefy, bewilder
- Objurgate: Chide or scold
- Obloquy: Abuse; being generally ill spoken of
- Obsequious: Servile; fawning
- Omnifarious: Of all sorts
- Omniscient: Knowing everything or much
- Onanism: Look it up, its a rude word I had not heard before!
- Ontology: Branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature of being
- Opprobrious: Severely scornful, abusive
- Opprobrium: Disgrace; bad reputation, cause of this
- Orotund: Dignified, pompous, imposing, boastful
- Ostensible: Pretended, put forward to conceal what is real
- Oxymoron: Contradictory words, e.g. Cheerful pessimist
- Pabulum: Food, esp. for the mind
- Palindrome: Word or verse, etc., that reads the same backwards as forwards
- Panacea: Universal remedy
- Pandemic: Prevalent over whole country or world
- Panegyric: Lauditory, discourse
- Pantheism: Belief that God is everything and everything God
- Pariah: Member of low caste; social outcast
- Parkinson's Law: Notion that work will always take as long as the time available for it!
- Paroxysm: Sudden outburst of rage, laughter, disease, etc
- Parsimonious: Someone who is thrifty, careful use of money; mean or stingy
- Parthenogenesis: Reproduction from gametes without fertilization
- Peccadillo: Trifling offence; venial sin
- Pedagogue: Schoolmaster; teacher
- Pedagogy: Science of teaching
- Perfidious: Breaching faith
- Peripatetic: Going from place to place; itinerant
- Periphrastic: Circumlocution; roundabout way of speaking
- Persiflage: Banter; light raillery
- Perspicacious: Having mental penetration or discernment
- Perspicuous: Clearly expressed; easily understood
- Pertinacious: Determined in some belief or cause; persistent; obstinate
- Phantasmagoria: Shifting scene of real or imagined figures
- Philanthropist: One showing concern for welfare of mankind, esp.as shown by acts of benevolence
- Philology: Science of language
- Phlegmatic: Calm; not easily agitated
- Physiognomy: Features or type of face; the study of this
- Polemics: Art or practice of controversial discussion
- Polemic: Verbal attack; controversial
- Polymorphous: Varying in individuals; passing through successive variations
- Pontificate: Be pompously dogmatic; play the pontiff
- Popinjay: Fob, conceited person
- Postprandial: After lunch or dinner
- Prophylactic: Tending to prevent disease or other misfortune
- Protagonist: Chief character in drama or plot
- Pugnacious: Disposed to fight; aggressive
- Pulchritude: Beauty
- Pusillanimous: Lacking courage; timid
- Quintessence: Purest and most perfect form or manifestation of something
- Quixotic: Extravagantly and romantically chivalrous
- Quotidian: Daily; everyday; commonplace
- Rabelaisian: Exuberant in style with coarse humour
- Raconteur: Teller of anecdotes
- Rancour: Inveterate bitterness; malignant hate
- Rapacious: Grasping, extortionate, predatory
- Repudiate: Disown, disavow, reject, refuse dealings with
- Rhetoric: Art of persuasive or impressive speaking or writing
- Rodomontade: Boastful talk
- Rubicund: Ruddy, high coloured (esp.complexion)
- Rumbustious: Boisterous, uproarious
- Sagacious: Having or showing insight or good judgement
- Salacious: Indecently erotic; lecherous
- Sanguinary: Accompanied by or delighting in bloodshed
- Sanguine: Optimistic; bright, florid complexion
- Sassenach: Englishman
- Saturnine: Of gloomy temperament
- Scatology: Preoccupation with the obscene or with excrement
- Schadenfreude: Malicious enjoyment of other peoples misfortunes
- Scurrilous: Grossly or obscenely abusive
- Scylla and Charybdis: Two dangers or extremes such that one can be avoided only by approaching the other
- Semantic: Of meaning in language
- Sequester: Seclude; isolate; sequestrate
- Serendipity: Faculty of making happy discoveries by accident
- Sibylline: Mysteriously prophetic
- Sinology: Study of Chinese language and history
- Sisyphean: Endless and fruitless task
- Soubriquet: Nickname
- Socratic irony: Pose of ignorance assumed to entice others into refutable statements
- Solecism: Offence against grammar, etiquette or idiom
- Soliloquy/Soliloquize: Talking without or regardless of hearers
- Solipsism: View that the self is all that exists or can be known
- Somnambulism: Sleep walking
- Somnolent: Sleepy, drowsy
- Sophism/Sophistry: False argument, one that is intended to deceive
- Sophist: Captious or fallacious reasoner; quibbler
- Speleology: Scientific study of caves
- Stakhanovite: Worker (esp.Russian)
- Stentorian: Loud and powerful voice
- Strabismus: Squinting, squint
- Sudorific: Causing sweating
- Sybarite: Self-indulgent or luxury-loving person
- Sycophant: Flatterer, toady
- Syllogism: Form of reasoning in which from two propositions a third is deduced
- Taciturn: Reserved in speech; saying little
- Tautology: Saying of same thing twice over but using different words
- Tendentious: Designed to advance a cause
- Tergiversation: Change of party or principles; apostasy; making of conflicting statements
- Termagant: Overbearing woman, virago
- Teutonic: Of Germanic peoples and languages
- Thespian: Of tragedy or drama
- Thraldom: Bondage
- Trichology: Study of hair
- Truculent: Pugnacious, defiant, aggressive
- Ubiquitous: Present everywhere or in several places simultaneously
- Unequivocal: Not ambiguous, plain, unmistakable
- Urbane: Courteous, elegant
- Ursine: Of or like a bear
- Utilitarianism: Doctrine that actions are right if they are useful or for benefit of the majority
- Utopia: Imagined perfect place or state of things
- Uxorious: Greatly or excessively fond of one's wife!
- Vacillate: Fluctuate in opinion or resolution
- Valediction: Bidding farewell; words used in this
- Valetudinarian: Person of poor health or unduly anxious about his health
- Verisimilitude: Appearance of being true or real
- Vicarious: Experienced imaginatively through another person; acting or done for another; delegated
- Vicissitude: A change of fortune or circumstances
- Vitriolic: Caustic or hostile
- Vulpine: Crafty, cunning, of like a fox
- Xenophobia: Morbid dislike of foreigners
- Yahoo: Bestial person (race of brutes in Gulliver's Travels)
- Zenith: Point of heavens directly above observer
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