skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Being the weblog of Mark Forsyth
Monday 25 March 2013
18 Words
Just a link today to this post on 18 words that should never have become obsolete.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
BOOKS BY ME
The Etymologicon
The Horologicon
The Elements of Eloquence
The Unknown Unknown
A Christmas Cornucopia
A Short History of Drunkenness
And they're variously available in fifteen languages and counting. Well, to be honest, the first three are pretty untranslatable. But the others have been done.
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Gallery
Photographs of me, if anybody desperately requires them.
Search This Blog
Written by
Mark Forsyth
For e-mail enquiries, entreaties, permissions etc please contact Katharine Aitken at United Agents.
Language Links
A Word A Day
British National Corpus
Dr Johnson's Dictionary (Selection)
Puttenham's Arte of English Poesie
Silva Rhetoricae
Six Degrees of Sir Thomas Urquhart
The Phrase Finder
Word Count
Dictionaries Online
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
Canting Dictionary (1736)
Etymological Dictionary
Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
Middle English Dictionary
Reverse Dictionary
Universal Etymological Dictionary (1721)
Urban Dictionary
Wiktionary
Style Guides Online
Fowler's King's English (1908)
Guardian
Strunk's Elements of Style (1918)
Telegraph
Blog Archive
►
2024
(1)
►
October
(1)
►
2023
(2)
►
October
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
2021
(11)
►
November
(1)
►
October
(2)
►
June
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
April
(2)
►
March
(4)
►
2020
(92)
►
October
(13)
►
September
(19)
►
August
(32)
►
July
(4)
►
June
(1)
►
May
(2)
►
April
(10)
►
March
(5)
►
February
(2)
►
January
(4)
►
2019
(9)
►
December
(2)
►
November
(4)
►
September
(1)
►
August
(1)
►
January
(1)
►
2018
(15)
►
December
(1)
►
November
(2)
►
October
(1)
►
September
(2)
►
July
(1)
►
May
(6)
►
April
(1)
►
February
(1)
►
2017
(14)
►
December
(6)
►
November
(6)
►
October
(1)
►
September
(1)
►
2016
(10)
►
December
(3)
►
November
(2)
►
October
(2)
►
July
(1)
►
February
(2)
►
2015
(10)
►
December
(2)
►
October
(1)
►
June
(1)
►
February
(1)
►
January
(5)
►
2014
(33)
►
December
(5)
►
November
(2)
►
October
(4)
►
September
(2)
►
August
(2)
►
July
(2)
►
June
(4)
►
May
(2)
►
April
(5)
►
March
(1)
►
February
(3)
►
January
(1)
▼
2013
(114)
►
December
(9)
►
November
(11)
►
October
(9)
►
September
(5)
►
August
(9)
►
July
(10)
►
June
(11)
►
May
(8)
►
April
(10)
▼
March
(11)
Spectator
TCB
18 Words
The Rise and Fall of Middle England
Budget and Bilge
Pontificating on Bridges
Twankleten
Loyalty and Allegiance
Language Origins
Dietrologia
Go, Went, Wend and Gaed
►
February
(10)
►
January
(11)
►
2012
(161)
►
December
(14)
►
November
(12)
►
October
(13)
►
September
(12)
►
August
(8)
►
July
(9)
►
June
(12)
►
May
(14)
►
April
(14)
►
March
(13)
►
February
(18)
►
January
(22)
►
2011
(290)
►
December
(23)
►
November
(23)
►
October
(22)
►
September
(23)
►
August
(22)
►
July
(21)
►
June
(26)
►
May
(22)
►
April
(25)
►
March
(29)
►
February
(25)
►
January
(29)
►
2010
(371)
►
December
(29)
►
November
(30)
►
October
(29)
►
September
(27)
►
August
(33)
►
July
(31)
►
June
(31)
►
May
(32)
►
April
(31)
►
March
(30)
►
February
(32)
►
January
(36)
►
2009
(114)
►
December
(42)
►
November
(62)
►
October
(10)
Labels
Etymology
(215)
Useful Words
(193)
Poetry
(86)
Shakespeare
(78)
Journalese
(68)
Food and Drink
(65)
Animals
(49)
Phrases
(45)
Novels
(36)
Technique
(35)
Song Lyrics
(30)
sex and sexism
(30)
semantic shifts
(29)
Bible
(25)
Place names
(25)
Politics
(23)
Medical
(21)
Religion
(21)
Eliot
(20)
Auden
(18)
Rhetoric
(17)
Chaucer
(15)
Mythology
(15)
dictionary
(15)
Military
(14)
Milton
(14)
commonly confused words
(14)
Anglo Saxon
(13)
Dickens
(13)
Swearing
(13)
Ambiguity
(12)
Tennyson
(12)
Verse Form
(11)
punctuation
(11)
French
(10)
London
(10)
Cinema
(9)
Peoples
(9)
Pope
(9)
awkward words
(9)
Americanisms
(8)
Dr Johnson
(8)
Grammar
(8)
Thomas Browne
(8)
plural
(8)
spelling
(8)
Acronyms
(7)
Keats
(7)
Lewis Carroll
(7)
Weather
(7)
Wodehouse
(7)
business
(7)
Metaphor
(6)
Translation
(6)
Cliches
(5)
Pejorative
(5)
Urquhart
(5)
puns
(5)
Beckett
(4)
Business-Speak
(4)
Internet Terms
(4)
Lists
(4)
Phrasal Verbs
(4)
Wordplay
(4)
nonsense words
(4)
Chandler
(3)
German
(3)
Marvell
(3)
Palindromes
(3)
Railway-speak
(3)
estate agent-speak
(3)
singular
(3)
Blake
(2)
Plagiarism
(2)
attributive nouns
(2)
class
(2)
compound nouns
(2)
loan words
(2)
Followers
Subscribe To
Posts
Atom
Posts
Comments
Atom
Comments
Why did I write? What sin to me unknown
Dipped me in ink, my parents' or my own?
- Alexander Pope
No comments:
Post a Comment