today:
109
yesterday:
242
Total:
1,004,267

칼럼

OxfordEnglishDic3wg0.jpg  

 

<script type="text/javascript"> adSetType('I'); htmlAdWH('93305230','120','60'); adSetType(''); </script>
LONDON (Aug. 6) -- Ever engaged a freegan in nonversation, or does the very idea make you want to precuperate? If you haven't a clue what we're talking about, don't worry, you're probably not xenolexic.

The bizarre terms used in those last two sentences are "non words": Words that have allegedly been submitted to the Oxford English Dictionary -- the gatekeepers of the English language -- but rejected on the grounds that too few people currently use them. Some of these non words are hyper-local slang, while others briefly spring in and out of existence when they're deployed to describe short-lived phenomena. A freegan, for example, is an eco-campaigner who hunts for goodies in other people's trash; a nonversation is a vapid, pointless chat; to "precuperate" means to get ready for an oncoming illness; and, perhaps most appropriately of all, a xenolexic is someone who suffers intense confusion when faced with new words.

Recently graduated graphic designer Luke Ngakane, 22 -- who this summer made forgotten phrases the focus of his final art project at Kingston University, London -- told AOL News that many more failed words are hidden away in a secret vault at Oxford. According to British daily The Telegraph, this word bank houses 50 large filing cabinets, each crammed with thousands of 6-by-4-inch cards detailing every declined entry. Some of these slips were scribbled before 1918 -- the year "Lord of the Rings" author J.R.R. Tolkien was hired as an OED sub-editor. (He'd go on to spend many hours puzzling over the etymology of "walrus" and the definition of "waggle.") New non-words are now stored on computers.

After hearing about the vault from another artist, Ngakane decided he'd try to save some of the lost phrases. He contacted Oxford University Press, OED's publishers, and asked if he could roam around among the archives. They confirmed the vault's existence but ignored his plea for access. Unwilling to abandon the project, he trawled the Internet, looking for amateur lexicographers who say their dictionary contenders had been denied by OED authorities.

Through his own research and logophile contacts, Ngakane quickly built up a pamphlet's worth of non words. He selected 39 that "had a lovely flow, or perfectly fit the thing they're describing, like polkadodge, which is the dance that happens when two people attempt to pass each other but end up moving in the same direction," and compiled them in a "Dictionary of Lost Words." Some 150 copies of this alternative dictionary were printed on an old-fashioned letterpress and handed out to writers, journalists and "others who could help get as many of these unique words back into circulation."

If he could put one word back into popular parlance, Ngakane says he'd pick furgle. "It means fumbling in your pocket or bag for keys or a coin that you can't quite get hold of, " he explains. "That's furgling."

Here's the complete collection of non words. Who knows, if you slip them into enough conversations, maybe one day they'll make it into the OED.

Accordionated: Being able to drive and refold a road map at the same time

Asphinxiation: Being sick to death of unanswerable puzzles or riddles

Blogish: A variety of English that uses a large number of initialisms, frequently used on blogs

Dringle: The watermark left on wood caused by a glass of liquid.

Dunandunate: The overuse of a word or phrase that has recently been added to your own vocabulary

Earworm: A catchy tune that frequently gets stuck in your head

Espacular: Something especially spectacular

Freegan: Someone who rejects consumerism, usually by eating discarded food

Fumb: Your large toe

Furgle: To feel in a pocket or bag for a small object such as a coin or key

Glocalization: Running a business according to both local and global considerations

Griefer: Someone who spends their online time harassing others

Headset jockey: A telephone call center worker

Lexpionage: The sleuthing of words and phrases

Locavor: A person who tries to eat only locally grown or produced food

Museum head: Feeling mentally exhausted and no longer able to take in information; usually following a trip to a museum

Nonversation: A worthless conversation, wherein nothing is explained or otherwise elaborated upon

Nudenda: An unhidden agenda

Onionate: To overwhelm with post-dining breath

Optotoxical: A look that could kill, normally from a parent or spouse

Parrotise: A haven for exotic birds especially green ones

Peppier: A waiter whose sole job is to offer diners ground pepper, usually from a large pepper mill

Precuperate: To prepare for the possibility of being ill

Pharming: The practice of creating a dummy website for phishing data

Polkadodge: The dance that occurs when two people attempt to pass each other but move in the same direction

Pregreening: To creep forward while waiting for a red traffic light to change

Quackmire: The muddy edges of a duck pond

Scrax: The waxy coating that is scratched off an instant lottery ticket

Smushables: Items that must be packed at the top of a bag to avoid being squashed

Spatulate: Removing cake mixture from the side of a bowl with a spatula

Sprog: To go faster then a jog but slower then a sprint

Sprummer: When summer and springtime can't decide which is to come first, usually hot one day then cold the next

Stealth-geek: Someone who hides their nerdy interests while maintaining a normal outward appearance

Vidiot: Someone who is inept at the act of programming video recording equipment

Whinese: A term for the language spoken by children on lengthy trips

Wibble: The trembling of the lower lip just shy of actually crying

Wurfing: The act of surfing the Internet while at work

Wikism: A piece of information that claims to be true but is wildly inaccurate

Xenolexica: A grave confusion when faced with unusual words
No. Subject Views Date
342 목사님, 헬라어 그만 좀 쓰시면 안되나요? 739 2020.09.07
341 아침묵상 - 8/11/2020 620 2020.08.11
340 종교개혁 500주년 CTS 기획 - 20. 진젠도프 백작과 모라비안 교도 930 2019.05.17
339 모라비안(Moravian) 1011 2019.05.17
338 하나님의 종, 트럼프!! 한국을 향한 ... 996 2018.06.17
337 분노의 날’ 준비하는 팔레스타인... 664 2018.05.13
336 대법 "사랑의교회 오정현, 목사자격 있는지 다시 봐야" 596 2018.04.16
335 '사랑의 교회' 설립자 "오정현 목사, 네 정체가 뭐냐" 530 2018.04.16
334 중보기도 298 2017.11.27
333 "하나님 나라는 결코 종교가 아니다" 389 2017.09.06
332 믿음이 제자리 걸음하는 이유 10가지! -박 한수목사 (제자 광성교회) 382 2017.08.05
331 Film studio donates $25K to replace Arkansas Ten Commandments Tribute Monument 333 2017.07.08
330 제 3성전 재건요청 329 2017.03.24
329 성경 세 번째 책 레위기가 중요한 이유 316 2017.03.23
328 칩 잉그램 목사의 목회론-‘리빙온더에지’ 대표 249 2017.03.18
327 산성교회-이 천수목사 548 2017.03.18
326 사랑과생각 234 2017.02.14
325 김준곤 목사님 347 2017.02.04
324 현재 길이 하나님의 뜻이 아님을 알 수 있는 5가지 신호- 기독일보 강혜진 기자 292 2017.01.14
323 결혼 전에 확실히 해야 할 4가지- 존 파이퍼 285 2017.01.14
322 하나님 아버지와의 관계 치유와 친밀한 관계의 회복(1) 300 2017.01.14
321 김광일 간사(예수전도단) 영상 310 2016.12.07
320 "박대통령님..." 홍정길 남서울은혜교회 원로목사 호소문 발표 317 2016.11.22
319 김은호 목사는... 1520 2016.11.05
318 김은호 목사가 털어놓은 공허, 재정, 그리고... 297 2016.11.05
317 김양재 목사 - 부르심(사6:1-8) 249 2016.11.04
316 김양재 목사 691 2016.11.01
315 "저는 제 동생을 지키는 자" 군중 울린 오바마 316 2016.08.30
314 김준곤 목사-김준곤목사, 100문 1답 710 2016.08.24
313 사라진 예수의 시신 찾는 로마 장교의 내면적 갈등 348 2016.05.07