Save the Words, a clever new Web site from Oxford University Press, is doing something about it. The makers of the Oxford English Dictionary (which catalogs every word in English, ever) have developed the site based on the simple idea that a word won’t die if it gets used often enough. To that end, the site creatively displays a swath of at-risk lexemes, each of which you may adopt by promising to use it at least once a day. This isn’t as easy as it might seem. Try, for instance, using “frutescent”—approaching the appearance of a shrub—or “archiloquy”—the first parts of a speech—naturally.
But then again, it’s better than speaking a language whose most interesting words come from clever rhymes and Facebook.
2 comments:
I love words. I'm not sure I'll be able to use archiloquy in a sentence, but I'm working on frutescent. "This morning, when I woke up, I knew it would be a bad hair day. I took one look at my frutescent hairstyle, tried a few evasive measures with my brush and finally gave up, putting it into a ponytail."
That made me giggle. Ponytails are a staple during the summer. : )
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