These words could fall off Collins dictionary
Published on Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 15:21, Updated on Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 01:38 in Lifestyle » Books section
Tags: Dictionary, The Collins , London

A WORD'S LIFE: Currently hanging in balance is the fate of 24 words of the Collins variety.
London: The life of words is not all that rosy. If their first task is to get into the dictionary, the next one is to stay on. That's a challenge, considering every new edition of a dictionary has to sacrifice some to accommodate scores of new ones.
Currently hanging in balance is the fate of 24 words of the Collins variety.
And The Times of London is making a last-ditch effort to extend their life into the forthcoming edition of The Collins dictionary.
The editors at Collins have decided they can dispense with the 24 rarely-used words listed below:
Abstergent: Cleansing or scouring
Agrestic: Rural; rustic; unpolished; uncouth
Apodeictic: Unquestionably true by virtue of demonstration
Caducity: Perishableness; senility
Caliginosity: Dimness; darkness
Compossible: Possible in coexistence with something else
Embrangle: To confuse or entangle
Exuviate: To shed (a skin or similar outer covering)
Fatidical: Prophetic
Fubsy: Short and stout; squat
Griseous: Streaked or mixed with grey; somewhat grey
Malison: A curse
Mansuetude: Gentleness or mildness
Muliebrity: The condition of being a woman
Niddering: Cowardly
Nitid: Bright: glistening
Olid: Foul-smelling
Oppugnant: Combative, antagonistic or contrary
Periapt: A charm or amulet
Recrement: Waste matter; refuse; dross
Roborant: Tending to fortify or increase strength
Skirr: A whirring or grating sound, as of the wings of birds in flight
Vaticinate: To foretell; prophesy
Vilipend: To treat or regard with contempt
Dictionary compilers at Collins have decided that the word list for the forthcoming edition of its largest volume is embrangled with words so obscure that they are linguistic recrement. Such words, they say, must be exuviated abstergently to make room for modern additions that will act as a roborant for the book.
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