More Weird and Wonderful Words

Author(s): Erin McKean

Reference

A second helping of colourful, quirky, and unusual words.
Containing hundreads of definitions written in a clear and conversational style. Included are dozens of full-page illustrations, offering whimsical and hilarious views of our glorious language.

General Information

  • : 9780195170573
  • : oup
  • : oup
  • : 0.327
  • : 01 February 2004
  • : United States
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Erin McKean
  • : Hardback
  • : annotated edition
  • : Danny Shanahan
  • : 144
  • : numerous line drawings

More About The Product

"McKean, senior editor for the Oxford University Press North American Dictionary Project, has gleaned some fascinating words for our enjoyment....A welcome addition."--Library Journal
Lexicographer McKean, editor of Verbatim magazine, has combed the Oxford English Dictionary to come up with more than 400 choice items for this amusing dictionary of rarely used words. Perhaps youve recently been guilty of acrasia ("the state of mind in which you act against your better judgment"). Perhaps you need a new synonym for "slut": Drazel will do quite nicely. Or perhaps youve been offended but are willing to offer the guilty party ignoscency ("forgiveness"). You may never find a reason to use the word "dromaeognathous" ("having a palate like that of an emu"), but just encountering it here could brighten your day. New Yorker cartoonist Shanahan adds a touch of whimsy to the enterprise with his comic illustrations. Lighthearted and instructive, this small volume would make a good gift book for eccentric wordsmiths or grammarians.--PublishersWeekly.com
"As everyone knows, the words marked obsolete or archaic in unabridged dictionaries are the best words of all. In More Weird and Wonderful Words (Oxford Univ., $16.95), edited by Erin McKean, with illustrations by Danny Shanahan, the dazzled reader will learn that 'bloncket' means 'gray, or a light grayish blue' and 'infrendiate' to 'gnash the teeth' and 'discerp' to 'tear something to shreds.' This is clearly the ideal resource when feeling a certain 'delassation' (i.e., fatigue) with the plain, homespun language of everyday life. Besides isn't it good to know that a 'musophobist' is 'a person who regards poetry with suspicious dislike'and a 'rhyparographer' a 'painter of unpleasant or sordid subjects'?"--Washington Post Book World

?