What is the most uncommon word used in English?
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What is the most uncommon word used in English?
Here are the fifteen most unusual words you can find in the English language.
- Serendipity. This word appears in numerous lists of untranslatable words and is a mystery mostly for non native speakers of English.
- Gobbledygook.
- Scrumptious.
- Agastopia.
- Halfpace.
- Impignorate.
- Jentacular.
- Nudiustertian.
What are some unique cool words?
Unique Words
- Abomasum — the fourth stomach of a ruminant, such as a cow or sheep (noun)
- Absquatulate — to leave somewhere abruptly (verb)
- Adagio — to perform in slow tempo (adverb)
- Alfresco — taking place or located in the open air (adverb)
- Alcazar — a Spanish palace or fortress (noun)
What are some badass words?
badass
- agitator.
- rebel.
- demagogue.
- dissident.
- fighter.
- frondeur.
- renegade.
- sparkplug.
What is the nicest word ever?
“Cellar Door” One of the most famous theories comes from Lord of the Rings author J.R.R. Tolkien, who proposed in a 1955 speech that “cellar door” is the most beautiful word (or phrase) in the English language.
What is the longest word in English?
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis
1 Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (forty-five letters) is lung disease caused by the inhalation of silica or quartz dust.
What are the most unusual words in the English language?
Here are the fifteen most unusual words in the English language. 1. Serendipity This word appears in numerous lists of untranslatable words. It refers to a happy and unexpected discovery. 2. Gobbledygook
Are there any obsolete words in the English language?
Some that we use today are actually thousands of years old, and originate from a time before English even existed. Others have since changed, been replaced, or completely ditched. Here are 30 obsolete or uncommon words that we think have gone before their time. Have fun in your next conversation and try a few! 1.
Is there such a thing as too beautiful to live long?
In his book Horologicon, pusblished this month in the U.S., English blogger Mark Forsyth puts together a collection of words that he describes as too beautiful to live long, too amusing to be taken seriously and too precise to be common. He excavated these gems from obscure dictionaries and, thankfully, does not present them in alphabetical order.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTnJrYyn8ac