
The English language is never static. The definitions, usages, and pronunciations change over time. (See โWords That No Longer Mean What They Used Toโ) If that werenโt complicated enough, it is impossible to compile an up-to-date comprehensive dictionary of all English words. Between 700 and 1,000 words are added to English every year.
On the flip side, English also discards words. Well, that may be a bit of an overstatement. That would suggest that there is more logic behind English than the facts justify. Shall we say, then, that English treats some words the same way we treat those ghastly sweaters Grandma gives us each year for Christmas? You donโt dare throw them out, but youโre not going to be caught dead wearing them.
Consider how much the language has changed since Samuel Johnson published his Dictionary of the English Language in 1755. One of the entries was the word โteen.โ Today, we think of a teen as a person between the ages of 13 and 19 years. According to Johnson, the word means, โto vex, irritate, annoy, anger, enrage, inflict suffering upon, to afflict, harass, to injure, harm.โ OKโฆ Maybe that was a poor example. Essentially, the meaning is the same.
Others, though, have either fallen out of common use or have changed so much in their usage that their original definitions are surprising. Following are some words and definitions from the good olโ days that may surprise and delight you:
- Betrump: To deceive, cheat; to elude, slip from
- Cony-catch: To swindle, cheat; to trick, dupe, deceive
- Crapulous: Suffering from excessive indulgence in food or drink
- Dowsabel: Applied generically to a sweetheart, “lady-love”
- Ear-rent: The figurative cost to a person of listening to trivial or incessant talk
- Flexanimous: Having a changeable mind
- Gazophylacium: A treasury or storehouse
- Grum: Sour, sullen, or ill-tempered
- Hugger–mugger: Concealment, secrecy; in secret, secretly, clandestinely.
- Jaunt: A short trip or excursion for pleasure
- Lucubrate: To work by lamplight; to study late at night
- Merry-go-sorry: A mixture of joy and sorrow
- Momist: A person who habitually finds fault; a harsh critic
- Obfuscate: To darken, to confuse, or to make unclear
- Obnubilate: To cloud, obscure, or darken
- Peacockize: To behave like a peacock; esp. to pose or strut ostentatiously
- Sillytonian: A silly or gullible person, esp. one considered as belonging to a notional sect of such people
- Slug-a-bed: One who lies long in bed through laziness
- Snout-fair: Having a fair countenance; fair-faced, comely, handsome
- Teen: To vex, irritate, annoy, anger, enrage / To inflict suffering upon; to afflict, harass; to injure, harm
- Wasteheart: Used to express grief, pity, regret, disappointment, or concern: โalas!โ โwoe is me!โ Also wasteheart-a-day, wasteheart of me
- Whiffler: A person who precedes a procession, carrying a mace or staff as a symbol of authority
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