Difference between revisions of "Civilisation/Words"

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== N ==
 
== N ==
Nabob – formerly, a provincial governor or viceroy who lived luxuriously in India. Later, an Englishman who returned wealthy from a tour of duty in India
 
 
Nacelle – a cover housing (separate from the fuselage) that holds engines, fuel, or equipment on an aircraft
 
 
Nacre – mother of pearl
 
 
Naevus – birthmark
 
 
Namby Pamby – a satire on the poetry of Ambrose Phillips
 
 
Naming – procedure whereby the speaker or one of his deputies proposes a vote on the suspension of a member of the House whom he believes has broken the rules of conduct of the House of Commons
 
 
Nanotechnology – the science and technology of building electronic circuits and devices from single atoms and molecules. Precision engineering of substances at the molecular and atomic level
 
 
Nawab – a deputy ruler or viceroy in India
 
 
Neat – in a drink, pure or undiluted
 
 
Necromancer – a person who practices necromancy, a discipline of black magic used to communicate with the dead to foretell the future
 
 
Necrosis – the premature death of cells and living tissue
 
 
Nectar – a sugar-rich liquid produced by plants. It is produced in glands called nectaries
 
 
Negus – former ruler of Ethiopia
 
 
Nelson’s Blood – rum
 
 
Neroli – from the orange
 
 
Netsuke – miniature sculptures that were invented in 17th century Japan to serve a practical function, i.e. to hold personal belongings
 
 
Neuroeconomics – combines neuroscience, economics, and psychology to study how we make choices
 
 
Newel – the upright post which supports the handrail of a stair banister
 
 
Nickelodeon – only cost a nickel to get in
 
 
Nidification – nest building
 
 
Ninja – a member of a class of 14th century Japanese mercenary agents who were trained in the martial arts and hired for espionage or sabotage or assassinations
 
 
Niqab – face veil, worn with a hijab. May cover the lower half of the face only, or the entire face with exception of the eyes, or may cover the face including the eyes
 
 
Nizam – title of the native sovereigns of Hyderabad State
 
 
Nocebo – a negative placebo effect as, for example, when patients taking medications experience adverse side effects unrelated to the specific pharmacological action of the drug
 
 
Nome – a subnational administrative division of ancient Egypt
 
 
Nomophobia – the fear of being out of mobile phone contact
 
 
Nosology – a branch of medicine that deals with classification of diseases
 
 
Notary – someone legally empowered to witness signatures and certify a document's validity
 
 
Notaphilist – collects banknotes
 
 
Noumenon – a posited object or event that is known (if at all) without the use of the senses. Contrasted with phenomenon
 
 
Novella – a prose fiction longer than a short story but shorter than a novel
 
 
Nugatory – of little value
 
 
Nuggar – sailing vessel used to navigate Nile
 
 
Numeronym – a number-based word, e.g. K9
 
 
Numismatist – collects coins and medals
 
 
Nuncio – diplomatic representative of the Pope
 
 
Nyctophobia – fear of darkness
 
 
== O ==
 
Obelus – division sign
 
 
Obelus – alternative name for the dagger typographical symbol
 
 
Obfuscation – the concept of concealing the meaning of communication by making it more confusing and harder to interpret
 
 
Obi – a sash for traditional Japanese dress
 
 
Oblast – type of administrative division in Slavic countries and in some countries of the former Soviet Union
 
 
Oblateness – the flattening of a planet from spherical form because of the centrifugal effect of rotation
 
 
Oboe – an improved navigational device based on radar that increased bombing accuracy
 
 
Obsidian '''–''' a usually black or banded, hard volcanic glass that displays shiny, curved surfaces when fractured and is formed by rapid cooling of lava
 
 
Obverse and Reverse – sides of a coin
 
 
Occidentalism – stereotyped and sometimes dehumanizing views on the Western world
 
 
Ochlophobia – fear of crowds
 
 
Ochlocracy – rule by the mob
 
 
Octoroon – has one black and seven white great grandparents (see quadroon)
 
 
Ocularist – makes artificial eyes
 
 
Oculus – an eyelike opening or ornament; a round window, or a circular opening at the apex of a dome
 
 
Odalisque – a virgin female slave, who could rise in status to being a concubine or a wife in Ottoman Seraglios, but most of whom tended to the harem of the Turkish sultan
 
 
Odeon – ancient Greek and Roman buildings built for singing exercises, musical shows and poetry competitions
 
 
Odometer – an instrument that indicates distance travelled by a vehicle
 
 
Oenology – study of wine making
 
 
Oenomel – an ancient Greek beverage consisting of honey and unfermented grape juice
 
 
Ogee – a curve shaped like an S, consisting of two arcs that curve in opposite senses. In architecture, the principal use of the term is to describe an arch composed of two ogees
 
 
Ogive – the roundly tapered end of a two-dimensional or three-dimensional object
 
 
Oligarchy – government by the few (see autocracy, plutocracy, stratocracy, theocracy)
 
 
Olivine – a greenish or yellow mineral, a silicate of magnesium and iron found in mafic and ultramafic igneous rock
 
 
Ombrophobia – fear of rain
 
 
Ombudsman – Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration
 
 
Omerta – code of silence used by the Mafia
 
 
Onager – a wild ass related to donkeys and horses used in ancient Sumer to pull chariots
 
 
Onager – a torsion-powered siege engine used by the Romans to catapult heavy projectiles such as rocks
 
 
Oneiromancy – divination by dreams
 
 
Oneirophobia – fear of dreams
 
 
Onesie – a one-piece garment combining a top with trousers, worn by adults as leisurewear
 
 
Onomastics – or onomatology, the study of proper names of all kinds and the origins of names
 
 
Ontology – branch of metaphysics that deals with the nature of being
 
 
Ophiophobia – fear of snakes
 
 
Ophthalmoscope – a lighted instrument used to examine the inside of the eye, including the retina and the optic nerve
 
 
Or – gold, in heraldry
 
 
Orientalism – the imitation or depiction of aspects of Eastern cultures in the West by writers, designers and artists
 
 
Ormolu – an 18th century English term for applying finely ground, high-carat gold in a mercury amalgam to an object of bronze
 
 
Ornithopter – an aircraft that flies by flapping its wings
 
 
Orrery – a mechanical device that illustrates the relative positions and motions of the planets and moons in the solar system in the heliocentric model
 
 
Orthography – a standardized system for using a particular writing system (script) to write a particular language
 
 
Orthotics – the science and technology of braces, especially when supporting weak or injured joints and muscles
 
 
Ossuary – a container or receptacle, such as an urn or a vault, for holding the bones of the dead
 
 
Osteoarchaeology – the study of bones from archaeological sites
 
 
Osteopathy – emphasizes the interrelationship between structure and function of the body and recognizes the body's ability to heal itself
 
 
Ostracon– a piece of pottery (or stone), usually broken off from a vase or other earthenware vessel
 
 
Outcrop – a visible exposure of bedrock on the surface of the Earth
 
 
Outspan – an area on a South African farm kept available for travellers to rest and refresh animals
 
 
Overner – anyone not native to Isle of Wight
 
 
Overtone – any frequency higher than the fundamental frequency of a sound
 
 
== P ==
 
Pacyderm – any of various non-ruminant hoofed mammals having very thick skin: elephant; rhinoceros; hippopotamus
 
 
Painter – a rope that is attached to the bow of a boat and used for tying up or for towing
 
 
Palaeography – study of ancient and medieval writings
 
 
Palaeontology – study of fossil animals and plants
 
 
Paleopathology – the study of disease of former times (as inferred from fossil evidence)
 
 
Palfrey – a type of horse highly valued as a riding horse in the Middle Ages
 
 
Palimpsest – a parchment or the like from which writing has been partially or completely erased to make room for another text
 
 
Palmate – web-footed
 
 
Pandiculation – the act of yawning and stretching simultaneously
 
 
Pangram – a sentence containing all the letters of the alphabet (see isogram)
 
 
Panjandrum – an important or self-important person
 
 
Panjandrum – a massive, rocket-propelled, explosive-laden cart designed by the British military during World War II
 
 
Pannage – ancient tradition allowing pig farmers to graze their animals through the New Forest, eating acorns which could prove deadly to ponies
 
 
Pantile – roofing tile with a S-shape; laid so that curves overlap
 
 
Pantograph – collects current from overhead wires, on a train
 
 
Paper tiger – the nature of a person or organization that appears powerful but is actually powerless and ineffectual
 
 
Papilla – a small nipple-like projection
 
 
Parabasis – a point in a play when all of the actors leave the stage and the chorus is left to address the audience directly
 
 
Parable – a short moral story
 
 
Paraclete – the Holy Spirit as advocate or counselor
 
 
Paradiddle – type of drum roll
 
 
Paragon – a model of excellence or perfection of a kind; a peerless example: a paragon of virtue
 
 
Paralanguage – the non-verbal elements of communication used to modify meaning and convey emotion
 
 
Paramagnetism – a form of magnetism which only occurs in the presence of an externally applied magnetic field
 
 
Paramour – an adulterous lover
 
 
Paraphilia – sexual arousal to objects, situations, or individuals that are not part of normative stimulation
 
 
Parapraxis – Freudian slip. A slip of the tongue
 
 
Parataxis – a literary technique, in writing or speaking, which favors short, simple sentences
 
 
Parthenocarpy – the development of a fruit without fertilization or seeds
 
 
Paraskavedekatriaphobia – fear of Friday the thirteenth
 
 
Pardoner – sold papal indulgences. A person who had a license to sell pardons for sins committed
 
 
Pariah – a social outcast
 
 
Paronomasia – pun, or play on words
 
 
Partisan – a member of an irregular military force formed to oppose control of an area by a foreign power or by an army of occupation
 
 
Partwork – series of magazines on a particular topic
 
 
Parvenu – a person who has suddenly risen to a higher social and economic class and has not yet gained social acceptance by others in that class
 
 
Pasha – a high rank in the Ottoman Empire political system, typically granted to governors, generals and dignitaries
 
 
Pashmina – a type of fine cashmere wool and the shawls made from it. The wool comes from the pashmina goat
 
 
Passant (of predators) – walking: standing on three feet, one forefoot raised
 
 
Pastel – an art medium in the form of a stick, consisting of pure powdered pigment and a binder
 
 
Pastiche – describes a literary or other artistic genre. The word has two competing meanings, meaning either a ‘hodge-podge’ or an imitation
 
 
Pastrami – spiced, smoked beef
 
 
Patchouli – a small Southeast Asian shrub in the mint family, having leaves that yield fragrant oil used in the manufacture of perfumes
 
 
Paternoster – a passenger elevator which consists of a chain of open compartments that move slowly in a loop up and down inside a building without stopping
 
 
Patina – the change in an object's surface resulting from natural aging due to wear and oxidation
 
 
Patka – a piece of cloth which fits snugly over the kesh, as worn by Monty Panesar
 
 
Patna – city giving its name to long-grained rice
 
 
Patrician – the original aristocratic families of Ancient Rome
 
 
Patristics – or patrology is the study of the early Christian writers who are designated Church Fathers
 
 
Patten – holds the bread at a communion service
 
 
Patrial – person who has right of abode in UK
 
 
Patrilineality – a system in which one belongs to one's father's lineage
 
 
Payola – in the American music industry, is the illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the broadcast of recordings on music radio
 
 
Payot – the Hebrew word for sidelocks or sidecurls
 
 
Pavee – Irish travelers
 
 
Paywall – a system that prevents Internet users from accessing webpage content without a paid subscription
 
 
Peal – a ringing of a set of bells, especially a change or set of changes rung on bells
 
 
Pebbledash – cement or plaster with small stones embedded in it, used as a coating for exterior walls
 
 
Peculation – embezzlement of public funds or property
 
 
Pedagogue – a schoolteacher; an educator                
 
 
Pedagogue – one who instructs in a pedantic or dogmatic manner
 
 
Pedalophobia – fear of bald people
 
 
Peel – long-handled pole used by a baker
 
 
Peerage – the peers of a kingdom considered as a group
 
 
Pejorative – tending to make or become worse. Disparaging; belittling
 
 
Pelagianism – the theological doctrine propounded by Pelagius, a British monk, and condemned as heresy by the Roman Catholic Church in 416 AD. It denied original sin and affirmed the ability of humans to be righteous by the exercise of free will
 
 
Pelotherapy – therapeutic treatment using mud
 
 
Pellucid – transparent
 
 
Pemmican – a concentrated mixture of fat and protein used as a nutritious food. Used by Arctic and Antarctic explorers
 
 
Peng – slang for an attractive girl
 
 
Penology – the study, theory, and practice of prison management and criminal rehabilitation
 
 
Penrose tiles – pattern of tiles, discovered by Roger Penrose and Robert Ammann, which could completely cover an infinite plane, but only in a pattern which is non-repeating (aperiodic)
 
 
Pentadactyl – having five fingers or toes on each hand or foot
 
 
Pentimento – an underlying image in a painting, as an earlier painting, part of a painting, or original draft, that shows through
 
 
Pentasyllabic – having or characterized by or consisting of five syllables, e.g. 77
 
 
Peon – day labourer in Spanish countries
 
 
Peripatetic – teacher who works at more than one college. Also – walking or travelling about. Of or pertaining to Aristotle, or the Aristotelian school of philosophy, who taught philosophy while walking in the Lyceum in ancient Athens
 
 
Periphrasis – a roundabout way of saying something, e.g. he’s passed away
 
 
Peristyle – a columned porch or open colonnade in a building surrounding a court that may contain an internal garden
 
 
Periwig / Peruke – wig fashionable in 17th and18th centuries
 
 
Persona – a character played by an actor. Term coined by Jung
 
 
Personification – giving human qualities to an inanimate object or an abstract idea, e.g. Keats’s ''To Autumn''
 
 
Pescetarian – a person who eats seafood, but not the flesh of other animals
 
 
Petard – an explosive device used to break down doors or walls. Hence – hoist
 
 
on ones... Used by Shakespeare in ''Hamlet''
 
 
Petiole – the small stalk attaching the leaf blade to the stem
 
 
Petrology – study of rocks
 
 
Pettifogger – a quibbler of details. Used to refer to lawyers
 
 
Pewter – any of numerous silver-grey alloys of tin with various amounts of antimony, copper, and sometimes lead
 
 
Phalanx – an ancient military formation of infantry in close, deep ranks with shields overlapping
 
 
Pharology – study of lighthouses
 
 
Phasmophobia – fear of ghosts
 
 
Philippic – a fiery, damning speech, or tirade, delivered to condemn a particular political actor. The term originates with Demosthenes, who delivered several attacks on Philip II of Macedon in the 4th century BC. Cicero consciously modeled his own attacks on Mark Antony, in 44 BC and 43 BC, on Demosthenes’ speeches
 
 
Philophobia – fear of love
 
 
Phishing – scammers fishing for account information by sending email, e.g. pretending to be a bank
 
 
Phizog – slang term for face
 
 
Phonology – study of the sound systems of a particular language
 
 
Photomontage – the process (and result) of making a composite photograph by cutting and joining a number of other photographs
 
 
Photometry – the science of measurement of light, in terms of its perceived brightness to the human eye
 
 
Photophore – a light-producing organ in certain fishes and other animals
 
 
Phreaking – phone hacking
 
 
Phrenology – a pseudoscience primarily focused on measurements of the human skull, based on the concept that the brain is the organ of the mind, and that certain brain areas have localized, specific functions
 
 
Phylactery – either of two small leather cases containing texts from the Hebrew Scriptures
 
 
Physiology – study of the functions of living organisms and their parts
 
 
Picador – a horseman in a bullfight who lances the bull's neck muscles
 
 
Picaresque – romantic novel that deals with rogues and rascals
 
 
Piccadilly – 17th century word for a shirt collar
 
 
Pied – having two or more colours
 
 
Pied-noir – a term for the former French colonists of North Africa, especially Algeria
 
 
Pieta – artwork or sculpture which portrays the Virgin Mary cradling the lifeless body of Christ upon her lap
 
 
Pigeon Pair of twins – one boy, one girl
 
 
Pilaster – rectangular column with a capital and base, projecting only slightly from a wall as an ornamental motif
 
 
Pilcrow – also called the paragraph mark, is a typographical character commonly used to denote individual paragraphs. Looks like a backwards P
 
 
Pillory – a device made of a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, formerly used for punishment by public humiliation
 
 
Pilum – a Roman legionary's six foot javelin
 
 
Pinata – a container, ofen a donkey, filled with sweets or toys at Mexican festivals
 
 
Pirogue – canoe made from a hollowed tree trunk
 
 
Pizzo – protection money paid to the Mafia
 
 
Planchet – a round metal disk that is ready to be struck as a coin. An older word for planchet is flan
 
 
Plantigrade – walking with the entire sole of the foot on the ground, as humans, bears, raccoons, and rabbits do
 
 
Plasticity – a property of a material to undergo a non-reversible change of shape in response to an applied force. Plastic deformation occurs under shear stress, as opposed to brittle fractures which occur under normal stress
 
 
Platen – the roller in a typewriter that serves as the backing for the paper against which the type bars strike
 
 
Platitude – a worn-out cliche
 
 
Plebiscite – a direct vote in which the entire electorate is invited to accept or refuse a proposal
 
 
Pleonasm – the use of more words or word-parts than is necessary for clear expression: e.g. burning fire
 
 
Pluralism – the recognition and affirmation of diversity within a political body
 
 
Plus fours – so called due to an extra 4” of material
 
 
Plutocracy – government by the wealthy (see autocracy, oligarchy, stratocracy, theocracy)
 
 
Pnyx – hill near the Acropolis where the Assembly of the Athenians held its meetings
 
 
Podcast '''–''' an audio broadcast that has been converted to an MP3 file or other audio file format for playback
 
 
Polemic – a controversial argument, especially one refuting or attacking a specific opinion or doctrine
 
 
Polemology – study of conflict and war
 
 
Polenta – a dish made from boiled cornmeal
 
 
Polari – a form of cant slang used in the gay subculture in Britain. It was revived in the 1950s and 1960s by its use by camp characters Julian and Sandy in the popular BBC radio shows ''Beyond our Ken'' and ''Round the Horne''
 
 
Polity – a state or one of its subordinate civil authorities, such as a city, or district. It is generally understood to mean a geographic area with a corresponding government
 
 
Polka – an energetic Bohemian dance performed in the round in 2/4 time
 
 
Pollard – animal without horns
 
 
Polonaise – a stately, marchlike Polish dance, primarily a promenade by couples
 
 
Polyandry – woman married to more than one man
 
 
Polychromy – the use of many colours in decoration, especially in architecture and sculpture
 
 
Polygamy – man married to more than one woman
 
 
Polygon – a closed plane figure bounded by three or more line segments
 
 
Polyphobia – fear of many things
 
 
Polyptych – painting which is divided into four or more sections, or panels
 
 
Polysemy – the capacity for a sign (e.g., a word, phrase, etc.) or signs to have multiple meanings, e.g. crane. Similar to homonymy
 
 
Pomade – from apples. Used to style hair
 
 
Pommel – counterweight at the top of the handle of a sword
 
 
Pontoon – floating bridge
 
 
Portmanteau word – formed by combining both sounds and meanings from two or more words, e.g. smog, genome (gene and chromosome), animatronics (animation and electronics)
 
 
Porphyrophobia – fear of the colour purple
 
 
Postprandial – after a meal
 
 
Potwalloper – an archaic term referring to a borough constituency returning members to the House of Commons before 1832 and the Reform Act
 
 
Praetor – an ancient ''Roman'' magistrate ranking below a consul
 
 
Praxis – practical application or exercise of a branch of learning; Habitual or established practice
 
 
Pratfall – a ridiculous tumble in which someone, especially a clown or comedian, lands on their bottom
 
 
Prebendary – a post connected to an Anglican or Catholic cathedral or collegiate church and is a type of canon who receives a prebend (a stipend) for serving the church
 
 
Precession – the motion of the axis of a spinning body, such as the wobble of a spinning top or the wobbling effect of the earth on its axis, when there is an external force acting on the axis
 
 
Prehensility – the quality of an organ that has adapted for grasping or holding. Examples of prehensile body parts include the tails of New World monkeys and opossums, the trunks of elephants, the tongues of giraffes, the lips of horses and the proboscides of tapir
 
 
Prelapsarian – of or relating to the period before the fall of Adam and Eve
 
 
Pressgang – the act of forcibly conscripting people to serve as sailors, abolished in 1853
 
 
Pret-a-porter – ready to wear fashion
 
 
Priest – a mallet used to kill fish caught when angling
 
 
Printer’s devil – young apprentice at a printers, covered in ink
 
 
Primogeniture – the common law right of the first-born son to inherit the entire estate, to the exclusion of younger siblings
 
 
Privateer – a private person or ship authorized by a government by letters of marque to attack foreign shipping during wartime
 
 
Proa – a type of multihull sailing vessel in Micronesia
 
 
Probate – proving a will
 
 
Probiotics – dietary supplements of live bacteria or yeasts thought to be healthy
 
 
Progeria – premature aging
 
 
Prolegomenon – an introduction
 
 
Proletariat – the class of modern wage labourers who, having no means of production of their own, are reduced to selling their labour power in order to live
 
 
Prolix – tending to speak or write at excessive length
 
 
Prone – lying down with the face down
 
 
Propylaea – any monumental gateway based on the original Propylaea that serves as the entrance to the Acropolis in Athens
 
 
Prorogation – period between two sessions of a legislative body
 
 
Proscenium – arch in a theatre separating the stage from the auditorium
 
 
Proscribe – 1. To denounce or condemn. 2. To prohibit; forbid
 
 
Prose – not written in ‘poetic style’ – it is written normally
 
 
Proselyte – a new convert; especially a gentile converted to Judaism
 
 
Prosody – the rhythm, stress, and intonation of speech. Includes poetical metre
 
 
Prosopagnosia – inability to recognize faces
 
 
Prosthetics – replacement of body parts with artificial parts
 
 
Protagonist – chief character in a play
 
 
Prophylactic – intended to prevent disease
 
 
Protoscience – historical philosophical disciplines which existed prior to the development of scientific method, which allowed them to develop into science proper, e.g. alchemy or astrology
 
 
Provenance – a record of ownership of a work of art or an antique, used as a guide to authenticity or quality
 
 
Provost – mayor in Scotland
 
 
Psephology – scientific analysis of political elections and polls
 
 
Pteridology – study of ferns
 
 
Pterophobia – fear of flying
 
 
Publican – a collector of public taxes or tolls in the ancient Roman Empire
 
 
Pudenda – the human external genital organs, especially of a woman
 
 
Puggle – a crossbreed dog with a beagle parent and a pug parent
 
 
Pukao – hats or topknots formerly placed on top of some moai statues from Easter Island
 
 
Pullet – a female chicken (sometimes applied to other species) under one year of age
 
 
Punic – Carthaginian: of or relating to or characteristic of ancient Carthage or its people or their language
 
 
Punkah – a type of fan
 
 
Punty – tool used in glassblowing
 
 
Purdah – screening women from the public eye
 
 
Purga – strong winter wind of central Asia
 
 
Pusillanimous – lacking courage; cowardly
 
 
Putative – commonly accepted as true on inconclusive grounds
 
 
Putsch – uprising or insurrection
 
 
Puttee – a covering for the lower part of the leg from the ankle to the knee, consisting of a long narrow piece of cloth wound tightly and spirally round the leg
 
 
Putto – figure of a small boy or cherub
 
 
Pyrography – the art of decorating wood or other materials with burn marks resulting from the controlled application of a heated object such as a poker
 
 
Pyromancy – divination by fire
 
 
Pyrometer – device which measures high temperatures
 
 
Pyx – a small container holding the consecrated bread in church
 
 
== Q ==
 
Quadriga – four-horse chariot
 
 
Quadrille – a historic dance performed by four couples in a rectangular formation, and a precursor to traditional square dancing
 
 
Quadroon – has one black and three white grandparents (see octoroon)
 
 
Quaestor – any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration
 
 
Quant – a pole used to propel a barge or punt through water
 
 
Quarrel – crossbow bolt
 
 
Quatrain – a poem or a stanza within a poem that consists of four lines
 
 
Quaver – an eighth note
 
 
Quenching – the rapid cooling of a workpiece to obtain certain material properties
 
 
Quincunx – tactical formation for a Roman legion. The pattern corresponds to the five-spot on dice
 
 
Quinquagesimal period – 50 days
 
 
Quintain – used by medieval knights for jousting practice, commonly using a shield on a pole as the target
 
 
Quipu – recording devices used by Incas. Consists of coloured threads with numeric and other values encoded by knots
 
 
Quixotism – impracticality in pursuit of ideals. Named after Don Quixote
 
  
 
== R ==
 
== R ==
Radiometry – the science of measurement of light in terms of absolute power
 
 
Raga – Indian music, from Sanskrit word meaning ‘colour’
 
 
Rampant – standing on left hind foot, other feet raised to fight
 
 
Rational number – a real number that can be expressed as a ratio of two integers
 
 
Rawhide – a hide or animal skin that has not been exposed to tanning
 
 
Realpolitik – politics or diplomacy based primarily on practical considerations, rather than ideological notions, e.g. Nixon’s dealings with China
 
 
Rebec – forerunner of the violin
 
 
Recess – legislative bodies – such as parliaments, assemblies and juries – that are released to reassemble at a later time
 
 
Recidivist – habitual criminal
 
 
Rector – an Anglican cleric who has charge of a parish and owns the tithes from it
 
 
Redaction – a form of editing in which multiple source texts are combined (redacted) and altered slightly to make a single document
 
 
Redemption – the deliverance of Christians from sin
 
 
Red letter day – originates from medieval church calendars. Illuminated manuscripts often marked initial capitals and highlighted words in red ink, known as rubrics
 
 
Red tops – tabloid newspapers
 
 
Reduplicative – words that repeat themselves, e.g. bye bye
 
 
Reed – vegetable tissue that vibrates, in a musical instrument
 
 
Reflux – the flowing back of a liquid, especially that of a fluid in the body
 
 
Regicide – killing a monarch
 
 
Rehook – a film which is so powerful and appealing that cinema goers go back for repeat viewings
 
 
Reification – making something real, bringing it into being, or making something concrete
 
 
Renegade – someone who rebels and becomes an outlaw
 
 
Reredos – a screen or decoration behind the altar in a church, usually depicting religious iconography or images and also called an altarpiece
 
 
Resinite – technical term for amber
 
 
Restitution – the restoration of something lost or stolen to its proper owner
 
 
Retiarius – a gladiator armed with a piece of netting and a trident
 
 
Reticulated – net-like
 
 
Reticule –a drawstring handbag
 
 
Revolvers – don’t pay off debts (see convenience users)
 
 
Rheology – the study of the flow of matter, primarily in the liquid state
 
 
Rhetoric – the art or study of using language effectively and persuasively
 
 
Rider – list of requirements demanded by celebrities before they appear on a TV show
 
 
Riff – a repeated chord progression, pattern, refrain or melodic figure
 
 
Rifling – the process of making spiral grooves in the barrel of a gun or firearm, which imparts a spin to a projectile. Hence – rifle
 
 
Rolling – dog fights
 
 
Rondeau – a short, lyrical poem of usually fifteen lines (three stanzas)
 
 
Ronin – a roving, mercenary samurai who serves no master or warlord
 
 
Rostrum – platform for public speakers in ancient Rome, adorned with beaks of captured ships
 
 
Rowel – wheel on a spur
 
 
Rubenesque – plump ladies, derived from ‘in the style of Rubens’
 
 
Ruminant – a mammal that digests plant-based food by initially softening it within the animal's first compartment of the stomach, then regurgitating the semi-digested mass, now known as cud, and chewing it again
 
 
Runcible spoon – has two sharp prongs and a curved prong
 
 
Rupophobia – fear of rubbish or dirt
 
 
Rutabaga – American name for swede
 
 
Rutilant – glowing red
 
 
Ryokan – a type of traditional Japanese inn that originated in the Edo period (1603–1868), when such inns served travelers along Japan's highways
 
 
Ryu – a school of Japanese martial art
 
 
== S ==
 
Sable – a small carnivorous mammal, closely related to the martens. It has historically been harvested for its highly valued fur
 
 
Sabra – slang term that refers to Israeli Jews born in Israel
 
 
Sabrage – opening a champagne bottle with a sabre
 
 
Sacrament – a religious ceremony or act of the Christian Church that is regarded as an outward and visible sign of divine grace, in particular
 
 
Safranin – any of a class of chiefly red organic dyes
 
 
Saga – ancient Icelandic literature
 
 
Sakoku – the foreign relations policy of Japan under which no foreigner or Japanese could enter or leave the country on penalty of death
 
 
Salient – a battlefield feature that projects into enemy territory
 
 
Samovar – Russian tea urn
 
 
Saponification – process used to make soap
 
 
Sarabande – a dance in triple metre
 
 
Sardonic – grimly mocking, or cynical
 
 
Sarisa – five metre long spear used in the ancient Greek and Hellenistic warfare. It was introduced by Philip II of Macedon and was used in the traditional Greek phalanx formation
 
 
Satrap – the name given to the governors of the provinces of ancient Median and Persian Achaemenid empires and in several of their heirs, the Sassanid and later Hellenistic empires
 
 
Satsuma – type of Japanese pottery
 
 
Scale – a sequence of musical notes in ascending and descending order
 
 
Scallywag – a Southern white who joined the Republican Party in the ex-Confederate South during Reconstruction
 
 
Scapular – a short monastic cloak covering the shoulders
 
 
Scarab – a dung beetle worshipped by the ancient Egyptians as an embodiment of the god Khepri. Also, an amulet modeled upon the dung beetle
 
 
Schadenfreude – malicious enjoyment at the expense of others
 
 
Schlock – cheap or inferior goods or material
 
 
Scholasticism – the system of theological and philosophical teaching predominant in the Middle Ages
 
 
Sciagraphy – the art or science of projecting or delineating shadows as they fall in nature
 
 
Scion – a descendant (of a notable family), a son or daughter
 
 
Sciophobia – fear of shadows
 
 
Scotopic – night vision
 
 
Scotophobia – fear of darkness
 
 
Scrag-end – a cut of mutton from the neck
 
 
Screever – artist who draws chalk pictures on pavements
 
 
Scripophilist – collects stocks and paper money
 
 
Scrivener – a person who could read and write or wrote letters to court and legal documents
 
 
Scrunchie – a fabric-covered elastic hair tie, commonly used to fasten long hair
 
 
Scutorium – room for copying manuscripts
 
 
Secession – the act of withdrawing from an organization, union, or especially a political entity
 
 
Securitization – a structured finance process, which involves pooling and repackaging of cash flow producing financial assets into securities that are then sold to investors
 
 
Sedilia – seats, usually made of stone, found on the liturgical south side of an altar, often in the chancel, for use during Mass
 
 
Seersucker – a thin, all-cotton fabric, commonly striped or checkered, used to make clothing for spring and summer wear
 
 
Seigneur – hereditary ruler of Sark
 
 
Selachophobia – fear of sharks
 
 
Semantics – the branch of linguistics and logic concerned with meaning
 
 
Semiotics – the study of signs and symbols
 
 
Semisomnia – low grade exhaustion caused by inadequate rest
 
 
Sendal – a thin light silk used in the Middle Ages for fine garments, church vestments, and banners
 
 
Sepoy – an indigenous soldier serving in the army of a foreign conqueror, especially an
 
 
Indian soldier serving under British command in India
 
 
S''eraglio'' – the sequestered living quarters used by wives and concubines in a Turkish household
 
 
Sestina – a structured 39-line poetic form
 
 
Sexting – the act of sending sexually explicit messages or photos electronically, primarily between mobile phones
 
 
Serendipity – the faculty of making fortunate discoveries by accident. Coined by Horace Walpole in 1754
 
 
Sericulture – production of silk. Named after the Chinese people called the Seres, who produced silk in ancient times
 
 
Shagreen – a type of roughened untanned leather, formerly made from a horse's back, or that of an onager (wild ass), and typically dyed green. Shagreen is now commonly made of the skins of sharks and rays
 
 
Shaman '''–''' a member of certain tribal societies who acts as a medium between the visible world and an invisible spirit world and who practices magic
 
 
Shambles – an obsolete term for an open-air slaughterhouse and meat market
 
 
Shamisen – three-stringed fretless lute used in Japanese traditional music
 
 
Shantung – a heavy fabric made with raw silk or with cotton substitutes
 
 
Shebeen – an illicit bar or club where excisable alcoholic beverages were sold without a licence
 
 
Shellac – a purified lac in the form of thin yellow or orange flakes
 
 
Shill – a person who is paid to help another person or organization to sell goods or services. The shill pretends to have no association with the seller/group and gives onlookers the impression that he or she is an enthusiastic customer. Shills are used in auctions to place phony bids
 
 
Shire – old word for a county
 
 
Shiv – a slang term for any sharp or pointed implement used as a knife-like weapon
 
 
Shtetl – a small town with a large Jewish population
 
 
Shoddy – woollen yarn made from scraps or used clothing, with some new wool added
 
 
Shofar – a horn, traditionally that of a ram, used for Jewish religious purposes
 
 
Shogun – ,a military rank and historical title in Japan. The rank is equivalent to general
 
 
Shoji – a door, window or room divider consisting of translucent paper over a frame of wood which holds together a lattice of wood or bamboo
 
 
Shotcrete – concrete conveyed through a hose and pneumatically projected at high velocity onto a surface
 
 
Showrooming – the practice of examining merchandise in a traditional brick and mortar retail store without purchasing it, but then shopping online to find a lower price for the same item
 
 
Sibyl – prophetic woman resident at shrines or temples throughout the Classical World
 
 
Sidewinder – snake, and surface-to-air missile
 
 
Sienna – a form of limonite clay most famous in the production of oil paint pigments. Its yellow-brown colour comes from ferric oxides contained within
 
 
Sigillography – study of wax seals
 
 
Simile – a figure of speech that expresses itself as a comparison, e.g., dead as a dodo
 
 
Simony – the buying or selling of ecclesiastical pardons, offices, or emoluments
 
 
Simulcast – shorthand for ‘simultaneous broadcast’, refers to programs or events broadcast across more than one medium
 
 
Sindoor – a red powder usually worn by married Indian women on the parting of the hair on the head
 
 
Sinus – cavity without a bone
 
 
Sirloin – between rump and fore-rib
 
 
Size – thin, weak glue
 
 
Skeuomorph – a physical ornament or design on an object made to resemble another material or technique, e.g. pottery embellished with imitation rivets reminiscent of similar pots made of metal
 
 
Skirt – a cut of beef
 
 
Slamming – moving a customer from one phone company to another without them knowing
 
 
Slip – a suspension in water of clay and/or other materials used in the production of ceramic ware
 
 
Snowclone – a type of cliche which uses an old idiom formulaically in a new context, e.g. ‘grey is the new black’
 
 
Sockpuppet – an online identity used for purposes of deception
 
 
Softwood – the wood of a coniferous tree
 
 
Solenoid – a magnetic switch that closes a circuit, often used as a relay
 
 
Solidus – gold coin issued by the Romans, and a weight measure for gold more generally, corresponding to 4.5 grams
 
 
Solidus – forward slash (/) punctuation mark
 
 
Soliloquy – actor’s speech only heard by the audience, and not by other actors
 
 
Solitaire – the mounting of a single gemstone on jewellery
 
 
Sonar – a measuring instrument that sends out an acoustic pulse in water and measures distances in terms of the time for the echo of the pulse to return; sonar is an acronym for ‘sound navigation ranging’ (see asdic)
 
 
Sonnet – poem of 14 lines
 
 
Sophism – can mean two very different things: In the modern definition, a sophism is a confusing or illogical argument used for deceiving someone. In Ancient Greece, the sophists were a group of teachers of philosophy and rhetoric
 
 
Sophistry – a deliberately invalid argument displaying ingenuity in reasoning in the hope of deceiving someone
 
 
Soring – the practice of applying irritants (including objects such as nails) or blistering agents to the front feet or forelegs of a horse, making it pick its feet up higher in an exaggerated manner
 
 
Sororicide – the act of killing one’s own sister
 
 
Soundtrack – can refer to the physical area of a film that contains the synchronized recorded sound
 
 
Souq – (also souk) is a commercial quarter in an Arab, Berber, and increasingly European city. The term is often used to designate the market in any Arabized or Muslim city
 
 
Spacionaut – French astronaut
 
 
Spall –  flakes of a material that are broken off a larger solid body and can be produced by a variety of mechanisms, including as a result of projectile impact, corrosion, or weathering''',''' Spalling and spallation both describe the process of surface failure in which spall is shed
 
 
Spandex – a synthetic fibre or fabric made from a polymer containing polyurethane, used in the manufacture of elastic clothing
 
 
Speakeasy – drinking den in prohibition era
 
 
Spectrometer – an instrument used to measure properties of light over a specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
 
 
Spelter – zinc treated to look like bronze and used as an inexpensive substitute in Art Nouveau applique ornament and Art Deco figures
 
 
Spermophile – collector of trivia
 
 
Spillway – the channel around or over a dam through which excess water is released or ‘spilled’ past the dam without going through the turbines
 
 
Spindrift – spray, particularly the spray blown from cresting waves
 
 
Spinneret – a silk-spinning organ of a spider
 
 
Splicing – joining two ropes by interweaving of strands
 
 
Spokeshave – a tool used to shape and smooth wooden rods and shafts
 
 
Spraints – otter droppings
 
 
Sprites – bolts of positive lightning from the upper atmosphere
 
 
Spurtle – wooden dowel used for stirring porridge
 
 
Squamous – covered with or formed of scales
 
 
Stabile – an abstract sculpture, usually of sheet metal, resembling a mobile but having no moving parts
 
 
Staycation – vacation at home and day trips, rather than going away
 
 
Steelbook – a casing in steel for either a DVD or a Blu-ray movie
 
 
Steer – castrated bull. Also known as a bullock
 
 
Stele – a stone or wooden slab, generally taller than it is wide, erected for funerals or commemorative purposes
 
 
Stepwell – well in which the water can be reached by descending a set of steps. Common in the west of India
 
 
Stetson – Philadelphia hat maker
 
 
Stevedore – docker who loads and unloads ships
 
 
Stigmata – marks on the body, like those on Christ’s body
 
 
Stimpmeter – measures speed of a golf green
 
 
Stipend – settled pay or compensation for services. Salary paid to a vicar
 
 
Stipendiary – salaried magistrates
 
 
Stockman – person who drives stock, in Australia
 
 
Stola – female toga
 
 
Stoop – the high-speed attack dive of a bird of prey
 
 
Strand – sandy beach or shoreline in Ireland
 
 
Stratocracy – government by the armed forces (see autocracy, oligarchy, plutocracy, theocracy)
 
 
Stridulation – to produce a shrill grating, chirping, or hissing sound by rubbing body parts together
 
 
Stromatolite – a sedimentological and biological ‘fossil’ representing colonies of bacteria alternating with layers of sediments
 
 
Stupa – earliest Buddhist religious monument
 
 
Subclavian – below the clavicle
 
 
Subwoofer – a woofer that is dedicated to the reproduction of low-pitched audio frequencies known as bass
 
 
Sucker – a shoot or cane which grows from a bud at the base of a tree or shrub or from its roots
 
 
Subduction – the process that takes place at convergent boundaries by which one tectonic plate moves under another tectonic plate, sinking into the Earth's mantle, as the plates converge
 
 
Sublime – of high spiritual, moral, or intellectual worth
 
 
Sufism – Islamic mysticism
 
 
Sulky – used in harness racing
 
 
Supercilia – eyebrows
 
 
Superfluid – a fluid, such as a liquid form of helium, exhibiting a frictionless flow at temperatures close to absolute zero
 
 
Super-injunction – stops journalists writing about legal proceedings, and forbids them mentioning the injunction as well
 
 
Supine – lying down with the face up
 
 
Surd – irrational root of an integer
 
 
Swami – an ascetic or yogi who has been initiated into the religious monastic order founded by some religious teacher
 
 
Swatch – a textile sample
 
 
Swazzle (swatchel) – a device made of two strips of metal bound around a cotton tape reed. The device is used to produce the distinctive harsh, rasping voice of Punch and is held in the mouth by the Professor (performer) in a Punch and Judy show
 
 
Sweepstake – a form of gambling where the entire prize may be awarded to the winner
 
 
Swishing – swapping items of clothing or shoes or an accessory with friends or acquaintances
 
 
Switch – a flexible rod which is typically used for corporal punishment, similar to birching
 
 
Syllabub – a beverage made from a mixture of sweetened milk/cream, wine and spices
 
 
Syllogism – a kind of logical argument in which one proposition (the conclusion) is inferred from two others (the premises) of a certain form, i.e. categorical proposition
 
 
Syncretism – the attempt to reconcile contrary beliefs, often while melding practices of various schools of thought
 
 
Synecdoche – a form of metonymy, but specifically ‘a whole for the part of a part for the whole’, e.g. describing a complete vehicle as ‘wheels’
 
 
Synesthesia – a neurological condition in which two or more bodily senses are coupled. In a form of synesthesia known as grapheme color synesthesia, letters or numbers may be perceived as inherently coloured, while in ordinal linguistic personification, numbers, days of the week and months of the year evoke personalities
 
 
Synonyms – word pairs that have a similar meaning, e.g. spooky and scary
 
  
 
== T ==
 
== T ==

Revision as of 18:51, 7 February 2023

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T

Tabard – a short coat, either sleeveless, or with short sleeves or shoulder pieces, which was a common item of men's clothing in the Middle Ages, usually for outdoors

Tabloid – comes from the name given by the London based pharmaceutical company Burroughs Wellcome & Co. to the compressed tablets they marketed as ‘Tabloid’ pills in the late 1880s

Tachograph – a device fitted to a vehicle that automatically records its speed and distance

Tachometer – an instrument measuring the rotation speed of a shaft or disk, as in a motor or other machine. Rev counter

Tachycardia – a heart rate that exceeds the normal range for a resting heart rate

Tacking – sailing into the wind with a zig-zag movement

Tajine – a type of North African dish (Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia) as well as the special pot to cook them in. Tajine dishes are slow cooked at low temperatures, resulting in tender, falling-off-the-bone meat with aromatic vegetables and sauce

Talkbox – an effects unit that allows musicians to modify the sound of a musical instrument

Tallit – a Jewish prayer shawl

Tallow – hard fat obtained from parts of the bodies of cattle, sheep, or horses, and used in foodstuffs or to make candles, leather dressing, soap, and lubricants

Tankini – a two piece bathing suit with the upper portion resembling a tank top

Tannoy – abbreviation of tantalum alloy

Tantalize – to tease, after Tantalus, a son of Zeus who was punished by being ‘tantalized’ with hunger and thirst in Tartarus

Tantalus – wooden display cabinet that holds decanters of spirits

Tantra – any of a comparatively recent class of Hindu or Buddhist religious literature written in Sanskrit and concerned with powerful ritual acts of body, speech, and mind

Taphophilia – a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries

Taphophobia – fear of being buried alive

Tarantass – a four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle on a long longitudinal frame. It was widely used in Russia in the first half of the 19th century

Tatami – a type of mat used as a flooring material in traditional Japanese-style rooms

Tatting – a decorative form of lace, usually made by hand with a small shuttle

Tautology – needless repetition of the same sense in different words

Taxol – a chemical substance derived from a yew tree of the Pacific Coast: used experimentally as a drug in the treatment of cancer

Technosexual – an individual who has a strong aesthetic sense and a love of gadgets. Also used to refer to robot fetishism

Tegestologist – collector of beer mats

Telesphobia – fear of coming last

Telly Novella – term used for a soap opera

Tempera – a water-based paint that uses egg, egg yolk, glue, or casein as a binder. Many commercially made paints identified as tempera are actually gouache

Tempering – a process of heat treating, which is used to increase the toughness of iron-based alloys. It is also a technique used to increase the toughness of glass

Temple – either of the flat surfaces alongside the forehead, in front of each ear

Tempura – Japanese deep fried batter-dipped seafood and vegetables

Tenderfoot – first rank US scout

Tendon – a tough band of fibrous connective tissue that usually connects muscle to bone. Also known as sinew (see ligament)

Teratology – the study of abnormalities of physiological development

Teratophobia – fear of monsters

Termagant – scalding woman

Tercentenary – 300 years

Terry towelling – a fabric with loops that can absorb large amounts of water. Also known as terrycloth

Terylene – a synthetic polyester fibre or fabric based on terephthalic acid, characterized by lightness and crease resistance

Tessellation – a repeated geometric design that covers a plane without gaps or overlaps

Tessera – an individual tile, usually formed in the shape of a cube, used in creating a mosaic

Tester – canopy above a four poster bed

Thalassophobia – fear of the sea

Thane – between a Freeman and a Noble

Theocracy – government by religious law (see autocracy, oligarchy, plutocracy, stratocracy)

Theodicy – a vindication of God's goodness and justice in the face of the existence of evil

Theremin – musical instrument played by moving the hands around antennae

Thinning – a term used in agricultural sciences to mean the removal of some plants, or parts of plants, to make room for the growth of others

Three-line whip – compulsory note to an MP to attend a vote

Threshold – the sill of a door

Tines – parallel or branching spikes forming parts of various tools, e.g. forks. Tines also form the branched bony antlers of deer

Tipstaff – arrests people in contempt of court

Tithe – a tenth part of one's annual income contributed voluntarily or due as a tax, especially for the support of the clergy or church

Titian – shade of brownish orange named after the artist

Titration – a procedure which is used to determine the concentration of an acid or base

Tittle – a small distinguishing mark, such as a diacritic or the dot on a lowercase i or j

Tocsin – an alarm bell or signal

Tog – Measure of thermal insulation

Tog – Terry Wogan fan (Terry’s old geezers)

Toilette – cloth cover for a ladies’ dressing table

Tombstoning – jumping into the sea off cliffs

Tom Swifty (or Tom Swiftie) – a phrase in which a quoted sentence is linked by a pun to the manner in which it is represented as having been said, e.g. ‘Pass me the shellfish,’ said Tom crabbily

Tonga – a kind of horse-drawn taxi formerly used in northern India

Tonitrophobia – fear of thunder

Tonsure – the traditional practice of Christian churches of cutting or shaving the hair from the scalp of clerics

Toponymy – the scientific study of toponyms (place-names)

Toque – chef’s hat

Torero – a bullfighter in Spain

Torii – a traditional Japanese gate most commonly found at the entrance of or within a Shinto shrine

Torpor – is a state of decreased physiological activity in an animal, usually by a reduced body temperature and metabolic rate

Torquetum or turquet – a medieval astronomical instrument designed to take and convert measurements made in three sets of coordinates: Horizon, equatorial, and ecliptic. In a sense, the torquetum is an analog computer

Toxiphobia – fear of poison

Tracery – an architectural term used primarily to describe the stonework elements that support the glass in a Gothic window

Transept – either of the two parts forming the arms of the cross shape, projecting at right angles from the nave

Transfiguration – a marked change in form or appearance; a metamorphosis

Transliteration – the conversion of a text from one script to another

Transpiration – loss of water by evaporation in terrestrial plants

Transom – the horizontal member which is framed across a window, dividing it into stages or heights

Trebuchet – large catapult

Treen – small objects made of wood

Trefah or treif – opposite of kosher. Means ‘torn’

Trepanation – surgical operation involving the removal of a disc of bone from the skull

Triangulation – the process of determining the location of a point by measuring angles to it from known points at either end of a fixed baseline

Tribadism – commonly known by its scissoring position, is a form of non-penetrative sex in which a woman rubs her vulva against her partner's body for sexual stimulation

Tribology – the science and engineering of interacting surfaces in relative motion. It includes the study and application of the principles of friction, lubrication and wear

Tribune – an official in ancient Rome chosen by the plebeians to protect their interests

Triclinium – a formal dining room in a Roman building with three couches

Tricolon – a sentence with three clearly defined parts (cola) of equal length, usually independent clauses and of increasing power

Triforium – a gallery of arches above the side-aisle vaulting in the nave of a church

Triga – three-horse chariot

Triglyph – an architectural term for the vertically channeled tablets of the Doric frieze

Trimmer – politician who changes allegiances

Tripoint – (also known as tri-border area) is a geographical point at which the borders of three countries or subnational entities meet

Trireme – an ancient Greek or Roman galley or warship, having three tiers of oars on each side

Triumvirate – a political regime dominated by three powerful political and/or military leaders

Triskaidekaphobia – fear of the number 13

Troika – a committee consisting of three members (Russian)

Troika – a Russian carriage pulled by three horses abreast

Troll – a commenter whose sole purpose is to attack the views expressed on a blog and incite a flamewar

Trope – a figurative or metaphorical use of a word or expression

Troubadour – one of a class of 12th century and 13th century lyric poets in southern France, northern Italy, and northern Spain, who composed songs about courtly love

Trousseau – clothes collected by a woman for her marriage

Trug – a shallow oblong basket made of strips of wood, traditionally used for carrying garden flowers and produce

Truthiness – the quality of knowing something in your gut, or your heart, as opposed to in your head

Trypanophobia – fear of needles

Trypophobia – fear of objects with small holes

Tsarevich (czarevich) – the title of the heir apparent or heir presumptive to the emperors of Russia

Tubercle – a wart-like projection

Tulle – a lightweight, very fine netting, which is often starched. Tulle is most commonly used for veils, gowns (particularly wedding gowns), and ballet tutus

Tumbi – a traditional high pitched, single string plucking instrument from the Punjab region

Tumbril – cart that took prisoners to the guillotine at the time of the French Revolution

Tup – male sheep

Tuque – Canadian knitted woolen cap

Turpentine – a fluid obtained by the distillation of resin obtained from trees, mainly pine trees

Tweeter – a speaker driver designed to reproduce high frequencies (see woofer)

Twerking – to dance to popular music in a sexually provocative manner involving thrusting hip movements and a low, squatting stance

Twilight – the time of day immediately following sunset

Twine – a light string or strong thread composed of two or more smaller strands or yarns twisted together

Twinsie – has three legs, four arms, two hoods. Onesie for two people

Tyrant – one who illegally seized and controlled a governmental power in a polis

U

Ultrasound – cyclic sound pressure with a frequency greater than the upper limit of human hearing. It is approximately 20 kilohertz

Umbilicus – navel or belly button

Unciform – hook-shaped

Undercroft – church crypt

Ulama – group of scholars in Islam

Ululation – a long, wavering, high-pitched vocal sound resembling a howl with a trilling quality. It is produced by emitting a high pitched loud voice accompanied with a rapid movement of the tongue and the uvula

Umami – a savory taste which is one of the five basic tastes, together with sweet, sour, bitter, and salty. Umami is a loanword from Japanese

Umrah – a pilgrimage to Mecca

Unicameralism – the practice of having only one legislative or parliamentary chamber

Unitarianism – a religious theological movement named for its understanding of God as one person, in direct contrast to Trinitarianism, which defines God as three persons coexisting consubstantially as one being

Urtication – flogging with nettles

Ushanka – a Russian fur cap with ear flaps

Uxoricide – killing one’s wife

Uxorious – excessive devotion to the wife

V

Valentines – love notes

Vaporetto – a motorboat for transporting people along the canals in Venice

Vascular – in zoology and medicine means ‘relating to blood vessels’. In botany, plants with a dedicated transport system for water and nutrients are called vascular plants

Vector – an organism that transmits diseases or infections

Vedette – a mounted sentry or outpost, who has the function of bringing information, giving signals or warnings of danger, etc., to a main body of troops

Vedic – the language of the Vedas, an early form of Sanskrit

Veduta – a highly detailed, usually large-scale painting or, actually more often print, of a cityscape or some other vista

Veilkini – an Islamic swimsuit similar in style to the Burkini

Veldt – open grassland in South Africa

Venal – open to bribery; mercenary

Verbosity – speech or writing which is deemed to use an excess of words. Adjectival forms are verbose, wordy, prolix and garrulous

Verecund – modest

Vermeil – a combination of sterling silver, gold, and other precious metals, commonly used as a component in jewellery

Vermicide – pesticide for worms

Vernacular – the everyday language spoken by a people

Vernissage – preview of art exhibition

Verso – even pages, Recto – odd pages of a book

Vespers – evening church service

Vestibule – a lobby, entrance hall, or passage between the entrance and the interior of a building

Vexilology – study of flags

Vicarious – felt or undergone as if one were taking part in the experience or feelings of another

Vicenarian – a person aged 20 to 29

Vintitulist – collects wine labels

Virion – a complete virus particle

Visceral – coming from strong emotions and not from logic or reason

Vishing – voice phishing, the criminal practice of using social engineering over the telephone system to gain access to private personal and financial information from the public

Viscosity – the thickness or resistance to flow of a liquid

Vitrine – a glass-paneled cabinet or case for displaying articles

Vizier – a high-ranking political advisor or minister

Volar – palms of the hands, or soles of the feet

Volkskammer – was East German parliament

Vomitorium – a passage situated below or behind a tier of seats in an amphitheatre, through which crowds can ‘spew out’ at the end of a performance

Vuvuzela – horns blown at African football matches

W

Wackaging – portmanteau of wacky and packaging

Wain – a usually large and heavy vehicle for farm use; a hay wain

Wainscoting – wood panelling

Wainwright – wagon maker

Wampum – beads of shells strung in strands and used by American Indians as money

Wanderlust – a strong desire for or impulse to wander or travel and explore the world

Warp – threads that run lengthwise along a cloth (see weft)

Wassailing – carol singing

Watermen – river workers who transfer passengers across and along city centre rivers and estuaries

Wattle – a mat of woven (willow) sticks and weeds; used in wall and dike construction

Wayland – a supernatural blacksmith and king of the elves

Webcast a broadcast of an event or a recording of an event over the World Wide Web

Webinar – portmanteau of web and seminar

Webisode – an episode of a TV programme that is shown first on the Internet

Weft – horizontal threads interlaced through the warp in a woven fabric

Wheelbase – the distance from the centre of the front wheel to that of the rear wheel in a motor vehicle

Wherry – type of boat particularly associated with the River Thames

Whey – watery part of milk that is separated from the curd in making cheese

Whitebait – the young of various fishes, especially the herring

Wicker – hard woven fibre formed into a rigid material, usually used for baskets or furniture

Wiki – a website or similar online resource which allows users to add and edit content collectively

Winnowing – the act of separating grain from chaff

Woad – blue dye used by ancient Britons to colour clothes and skin

Wonk – an overly studious person, particularly student; a nerd

Woofer – a speaker driver designed to reproduce low frequencies (see tweeter)

Wrangler – a student who gains first-class honours in the third year of Cambridge University’s undergraduate degree in mathematics

X

Xenia – the ancient Greek concept of hospitality

Xiphoid – sword-shaped

Y

Yakuza – members of traditional organized crime groups in Japan

Yarmulke – Jewish skullcap. Also known as a kippah

Yashmak – double veil worn in public, only the eyes are uncovered

Yazidi – primarily ethnic Kurds, mostly living in the Mosul region of northern Iraq

Yodeling – a form of singing that involves singing an extended note which rapidly and repeatedly changes in pitch

Z

Zambo – an individual in the Americas who is of mixed African and Amerindian ancestry

Zealot – a member of an ancient Jewish sect in Judea in the 1st century who fought to the death against the Romans

Zeugma – a figure of speech describing the joining of two or more parts of a sentence with a single common verb or noun

Zucchetto – small skullcap. The Pope's zucchetto is white, those worn by cardinals are red, bishops wear violet, and priests and deacons wear black