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Weird Word of the Week Weird Word of the Week

Thursday 4 June 2026
Ab Vrbe Condita 2779

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05/31/2026



Agonic (noun)

The imaginary line, roughly longitudinal, where magnetic and true north lie in exactly the same direction. It wanders unpredictably, typically about 10 miles per year.
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05/24/2026: Penniform (adjective) Feather-shaped
05/17/2026: Nixie (noun) A letter or package that’s undeliverable due to a faulty address. Or, a female water spirit. Or, one of those old-fashioned numeric displays consisting of a neon-filled glass tube and multiple cathodes.
05/10/2026: Grimthorpe (verb) To alter or remodel a building without taking its history and character into account. Named for Edmund Beckett, 1st Baron Grimthorpe, QC (1816–1905).
05/03/2026: Ulotrichous (adjective) Having tightly curled or “peppercorn” hair
04/26/2026: Distichiasis (noun) The condition, caused by a genetic mutation, of having double rows of eyelashes. One of its better known sufferers was actress Elizabeth Taylor.
04/19/2026: Absquatulate (verb) To slip out without being seen
04/12/2026: Semiotician (noun) An expert at reading signs, symbols, gestures, and other visual cues
04/05/2026: Jyngine (adjective) Wryneck-like. A wryneck is either of two species of European woodpeckers that can whip their heads around almost 180 degrees, which, combined with hissing, serves as a threat display.
03/29/2026: Idiolect (noun) The individualistic traits of a person’s speech. A further subdivision of dialect.
03/22/2026: Hapax legomenon (noun) The bane of dictionary authors, a word within a particular language that occurrs only once in the written record
03/15/2026: Mesonoxian (adjective) Pertaining to midnight
03/08/2026: Morepork (noun)
morepork
An owl, Ninox novaeseelandiae, found in Australia and New Zealand

03/01/2026: Retromingent (adjective) Cowardly (literally, “urinating backward”)
02/22/2026: Chrysopoeia (verb) The act of transmuting base substances into gold
02/15/2026: Zero Stroke (noun) A mental disorder occurring during times of economic hyperinflation in which the sufferer obsessively writes row upon row of zeros. The term was coined by German physicians observing this phenomenon during the Weimar Republic period.
02/08/2026: Naufragous (adjective) Shipwreck-causing
02/01/2026: Deasil (adverb or adjective) Clockwise. As a verb, it means to move clockwise.
01/25/2026: Widdershins (adverb or adjective) Counterclockwise
01/18/2026: Snup (verb) To underpay for something extremely valuable, taking advantage of a seller’s ignorance
01/11/2026: Cerberus (noun) A hypervigilant custodian, such as an office receptionist who makes people wait interminably and hardly lets anybody in, regardles of their import
Vittoria Colonna
Thomas Pynchon
Marguerite Duras
Pope Pius II
Evelyn Waugh
Charlotte Mary Yonge
Elizabeth Inchbald
Erma Bombeck
Anthony Burgess
Dorothy Sayers
Sir Walter Scott
<span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:176px;"><i>I fixed my eyes on life’s noblest goals / Yet can’t lift myself / I’m not on the right road / Mine is anything but firm and easy.<br><br><aside>Vittoria Colonna</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:166px;"><i>Hey, over here! Have your picture taken with a reclusive author! Today only, we’ll throw in a free autograph! But wait, there’s more!<br><br><aside>Thomas Pynchon</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:180px;"><i>When the past is recaptured by the imagination, breath is put back into life.<br><br><aside>Marguerite Duras</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:151px;"><i>Her throat was snowy white, her eyes shone with the radiance of the sun; her glance was happy, her face animated, and her cheeks like lilies mixed with crimson roses.<br><br><aside>Pope Pius II</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:166px;"><i>One forgets words as one forgets names. One’s vocabulary needs constant fertilizing or it will die.<br><br><aside>Evelyn Waugh</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:171px;"><i>If I write nothing but fiction for some time I begin to get stupid, and to feel rather as if it had been a long meal of sweets; then history is a rest, for research or narration brings a different part of the mind into play.<br><br><aside>Charlotte Mary Yonge</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:169px;"><i>Good humor, like the jaundice, makes everyone of its own complexion.<br><br><aside>Elizabeth Inchbald</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:159px;"><i>I will buy any creme, cosmetic, or elixir from a woman with a European accent.<br><br><aside>Erma Bombeck</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:177px;"><i>Readers are plentiful; thinkers are rare.<br><br><aside>Anthony Burgess</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:172px;"><i>As I grow older and older / and totter towards the tomb, / I find that I care less and less / Who goes to bed with whom.<br><br><aside>Dorothy Sayers</aside></i></span> <span class="generic-slide-caption" style="width:146px;"><i>What I have to say is far more important than how long my eyelashes are.<br><br><aside>Sir Walter Scott</aside></i></span>


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