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Increase your word power

(85 Posts)
pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 06:56:15

I have started his thread as in another thread there seems an interest in discussing lesser known/used words and phrases.
I suggest each contribute posts only one word for discussion per day (too many words will be confusing)

Thanks to Readers Digest for the title.

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 07:04:58

I'll kick us off with a word I used everyday (well today !) that is perhaps related to the origin of this thread :-

PROLIX

baubles Fri 10-Apr-15 07:25:36

Thanks Pompa, I'll try to use that one.

Mine isn't terribly obscure, it's just a favourite word

Gadzookery - noun

(British, dialect) the use of archaic words or expressions, especially in historical novels. smile

Leticia Fri 10-Apr-15 07:29:56

I like fossicking.

baubles Fri 10-Apr-15 07:38:15

I may just try a spot of that the next time I've got the GDCs out by the riverside.

Lilygran Fri 10-Apr-15 07:39:48

Nesh is a good Yorkshire word. It means a bit wimpy, particularly someone who feels the cold and needs to wear a coat just because it's freezing.

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 07:47:43

Perhaps Gadzookery would have been a good title for this thread.

hildajenniJ Fri 10-Apr-15 08:08:53

Good word pompa. I can be meandering and verbose when I want to be too.

Marmight Fri 10-Apr-15 08:17:52

The synonym 'Circumlocutory' appeals to me; I do a lot of that.
When I first read Prolix, I had just woken up and saw it as prolapse blush

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 08:29:31

Marmight, I like Circumlocutory, it has a melodic sound, far better than prolix, that is an unpleasant sound. Verbose is a word I use quite commonly , it was a term commonly used in computer programming.

feetlebaum Fri 10-Apr-15 08:36:20

It was Charles Dickens who invented the 'Circumlocution Office' in Little Dorit - the means by which action on almost anything could be delayed almost infinitely.

absent Fri 10-Apr-15 08:42:10

Not exactly relevant, but Charles Dickens can claim the first use of the word cocktail in a written work – Martin Chuzzlewit I think.

Teetime Fri 10-Apr-15 08:54:52

Lovely I enjoy a nice word- here's mine - praxis. I shall go off and fossick about on the golf course today and see if it improves my score.

Grannybug Fri 10-Apr-15 08:56:59

Transmogrify....applied to bread that I have forgotten about!grin

Jane10 Fri 10-Apr-15 09:02:16

I always liked tintinabulation after I first read it in the John Betchemin (sp?) poem 'summoned by bells' but its a hard word to introduce in everyday conversation -or at all!

Elegran Fri 10-Apr-15 09:09:15

I wish all those words had been in the word list in the link on the Other Thread. I know all of them, but there were some on that link that foxed me. I was discombobulated.

Marmight Fri 10-Apr-15 09:20:20

I love the word 'discombobulation'. Never mind the meaning, it has a cosy , rounded, bobbly feel to it ! [duh emoticon]

AshTree Fri 10-Apr-15 09:56:40

I too love tintinnabulation, a very onomatopoeic word.

Another favourite is defenestration, the act of throwing something or someone out of the window. How lovely to say, casually, when asked where something is, "Oh I defenestrated it." grin

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 09:59:10

discombobulation, I am confused as to it's meaning. confused

Eloethan Fri 10-Apr-15 10:02:35

It was only in relatively recent years that I realised "discombobulate" was a real word - I'd thought it was a jokey, made-up word. A great example of a word that sounds like what it means.

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 10:04:56

Absent, I think that is very relevant, it is interesting to know the origin of common words. It surprised me that Gadzookery is a relatively modern word.

absent Fri 10-Apr-15 10:09:41

1618 Defenestration of Prague – funny how you remember stuff isn't it? Although now I think about it, wasn't there one a couple of hundred years earlier?

AshTree Fri 10-Apr-15 10:41:46

Yes, absent, the first was in 1419.

AshTree Fri 10-Apr-15 10:46:54

Pompa I have just realised you are one of the digerati smile

pompa Fri 10-Apr-15 11:01:04

The nearest I get to the digerati is digging the garden until I'm called in for tea. smile