Appendix:English nonces

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besnowball

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:besnowball

Etymology

From be- +‎ snowball.

Verb

besnowball

  1. To pelt as if with snowballs.
    • George Chapman
      Slise, 'twere a good deed, to get boyes to pinne cards at his backe, hang squibs at his tayle, ring him through the towne with basons, besnowball him with rotten egges, and make him asham'de of the Commission before hee seale it.

blarophant

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Modeled after hierophant?”)

Noun

blarophant

  1. (nonce word) bloviant; boastful
    • 1877, Salt Lake Tribune
      He was illiterate, and he has made frequent boast that he never saw the inside of a schoolhouse. His habit of mind was singularly illogical, and his public addresses the greatest farrago of nonsense that ever was put in print. He prided himself on being a great financier, and yet all of his commercial speculations have been conspicuous failures. He was a blarophant, and pretended to be in daily intercourse with the Almighty, and yet he was groveling in his ideas and the system of religion he formulated was well nigh Satanic.

contransmagnificandjewbangtantiality

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:contransmagnificandjewbangtantiality

Etymology

Coined by James Joyce; apparently a blend of consubstantial, transubstantiation, and either magnificent, magnify,[1] or Magnificat, and Jew, bang,[2] and -ity; perhaps modelled on transmagnificandubandanciality, which had been coined by James Clarence Mangan in 1884.[3] Likely intended to have the connotation of "the consubstantiation, transubstantiation, magnification of a Jewish, explosively begotten God-man", in reference to Jesus Christ.[4]

Noun

contransmagnificandjewbangtantiality

  1. A nonsense word with no intelligible meaning.
    • 1918-1920, James Joyce, Ulysses:
      Where is poor dear Arius to try conclusions? Warring his life long upon the contransmagnificandjewbangtantiality.

References

  1. ^ Terence Killeen ((Can we date this quote?)) Ulysses unbound: a reader's companion to James Joyce's Ulysses, page 35
  2. ^ Mary Gore Forrester ((Can we date this quote?)) Moral language, pages 57–9
  3. ^ Aingeal Clare (2009) “'Pseudostylic Shamiana': James Joyce and James Clarence Mangan”, in Joyce Studies Annual, pages 248-265
  4. ^ Richard Ellmann (1972) Ulysses on the Liffey, Oxford University Press

etymolawgy

Etymology

Blend of etymology +‎ law

Noun

etymolawgy

  1. (nonce word) The study of the historical development of a legal term, with the parallel development of the corresponding legal concept.
    • 2016, Caroline Laske, “Losing touch with the common tongues – the story of law French”, in International Journal of Legal Discourse 2016 (1; 1)‎, archived from the original on 13 February 2022:
      In a first section, an overview will describe the impact French had on the medieval linguistic and cultural landscape of England, followed by a chapter on law French. A third section examines the process of increasing technicality in the language of the law, by looking at, what I have called, etymolawgy, which combines the study of the history of a term with the parallel development of the corresponding legal concept.

goniolatry

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:goniolatry

Etymology

From gonio- +‎ -latry, from Ancient Greek γωνια (gōnia, angle).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɡəʊnɪˈɒlətɹi/

Noun

goniolatry

  1. The worship of angles.
    • 1997, Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon:
      He had turn’d the same covetous Angles as the Welshman,– tho’ perhaps never as many, for Shelby seem’d seiz’d with Goniolatry, or the Worship of Angles, defining tracts of virgin Land by as many of these exhilarating Instrumental Sweeps, as possible.

husbinder

Etymology

husband in a mock Cockney accent.

Noun

husbinder

  1. (nonce word) Husband.
    • 1899, H. G. Wells, Love and Mr. Lewisham, Delphi Classics →ISBN
      "Ethel Lewisham," said Lewisham several times, and Ethel reciprocated with " Husbinder" and "Hubby dear," and took off her glove to look again in an ostentatious manner at a ring.
    • 2006, Gene K. Rinkel, Margaret E. Rinkel, The Picshuas of H.G. Wells: A Burlesque Diary, University of Illinois Press →ISBN, page 40
      While the nickname for new companion, “Bits”, commented on her diminutive size, “Bins” reflected his amusement and lingering fascination with Cockney- isms. “Bins” was a shortened form of “Binder” which, in turn, had been reduced from “Husbinder.” By dropping the aspirant “h,” it became “usbinder, and finally “Mr. Binder.”

husstenhasstencaffincoffintussemtossemdamandamnacosaghcusaghhobixhatouxpeswchbechoscashlcarcarcaract

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:husstenhasstencaffincoffintussemtossemdamandamnacosaghcusaghhobixhatouxpeswchbechoscashlcarcarcaract

Etymology

A coinage from Finnegans Wake author James Joyce said to represent a cough. The word is a hybrid of words in many languages that relate to coughing.

Interjection

husstenhasstencaffincoffintussemtossemdamandamnacosaghcusaghhobixhatouxpeswchbechoscashlcarcarcaract

  1. (nonce word) A sound representing a cough.
    • 1939, James Joyce, Finnegans Wake:
      — I apologuise, Shaun began, but I would rather spinooze you one from the grimm gests of Jacko and Esaup, fable one, feeble too. Let us here consider the casus, my dear little cousis (husstenhasstencaffincoffintussemtossemdamandamnacosaghcusaghhobixhatouxpeswchbechoscashlcarcarcaract) of the Ondt and the Gracehoper.

kastoranthropy

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:kastoranthropy

Etymology

Formed from Ancient Greek κάστορας (kástoras) + -anthropy (from ἄνθρωπος (ánthrōpos)).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kæstəˈɹænθɹəpi/

Noun

kastoranthropy

  1. The delusion that one is a beaver; the condition of being a werebeaver.
    • 1997, Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon:
      The next morning he is found down-hill from his House, beside the fishing-Pond, lying among remnants of gnaw’d Shrubs, with fragments of half-eaten water-lillies protruding from his Mouth. ‘Kastoranthropy,’ Professor Voam shaking his head, ‘And haven’t I seen it do things to a man. Tragick.’
    • 2002, Anne Mangen, Rolf Gaasland, Blissful Bewilderment: Studies in the Fiction of Thomas Pynchon →ISBN, page 220:
      one of the not uncommon cases of kastoranthropy, or, were-beaverality:

klikkaklakkaklaskaklopatzklatschabattacreppycrottygraddaghsemmihsammihnouithappluddyappladdypkonpkot

Etymology

A coinage from Finnegans Wake author James Joyce said to represent glass breaking.

Noun

klikkaklakkaklaskaklopatzklatschabattacreppycrottygraddaghsemmihsammihnouithappluddyappladdypkonpkot

  1. (nonce word) A sound which represents glass breaking.
    • 1939, James Joyce, Finnegans Wake:
      It's cumming! It's brumming! The clip, the clop! (All cla) Glass crash. THE (klikkaklakkaklaskaklopatzklatschabattacreppycrottygraddaghsemmihsammihnouithappluddyappladdypkonpkot!)

lukkedoerendunandurraskewdylooshoofermoyportertooryzooysphalnabortansporthaokansakroidverjkapakkapuk

for attribution purposes, page history can be found at Citations:lukkedoerendunandurraskewdylooshoofermoyportertooryzooysphalnabortansporthaokansakroidverjkapakkapuk

Etymology

A coinage from Finnegans Wake author James Joyce said to represent the shutting of a door. The word is a hybrid of phrases in many languages that relate to the shutting of doors, including Danish lukke doeren, French fermez la porte, German Tür zu, and Russian закрой дверь (zakroj dverʹ).

Noun

lukkedoerendunandurraskewdylooshoofermoyportertooryzooysphalnabortansporthaokansakroidverjkapakkapuk

  1. (nonce word) A sound which represents the shutting of doors.
    • 1939, James Joyce, Finnegans Wake:
      Wold Forrester Farley who, in deesperation of deispiration at the diasporation of his diesparation, was found of the round of the sound of the lound of the.Lukkedoerendunandurraskewdylooshoofermoyportertooryzooysphalnabortansporthaokansakroidverjkapakkapuk. Byfall. Upploud! The play thou schouwburgst, Game, here endeth. The curtain drops by deep request.

manticratic

Etymology

From Ancient Greek μάντις (mántis, seer, soothsayer) + κράτος (krátos, strength, power). Attested in the English corpus solely in the Seven Pillars of Wisdom by T. E. Lawrence (see quotation below).

Pronunciation

Adjective

manticratic

  1. Pertaining to a society ruled by the descendants of a prophet (specifically, the Prophet Muhammad)
    • 1935, T.E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, Wordsworth Editions, published 1997, →ISBN, pages 31-32:
      The prophet's family had held temporal rule in Mecca for the last nine hundred years, and counted some two thousand persons. The old Ottoman government regarded this clan of manticratic peers with a mixture of reverence and distrust.

osseocarnisanguineoviscericartilaginonervomedullary

Etymology

Coined by Thomas Love Peacock in Headlong Hall (1815). It is essentially a compound adjective that is obtained by stringing together Latin terms that describe the body.

Adjective

osseocarnisanguineoviscericartilaginonervomedullary

  1. Having the structure of the human body.
    1822, Thomas Love Peacock, Headlong Hall:
    The gentlemen accordingly tossed off their heel-taps, and Mr Cranium proceeded: "Ardently desirous, to the extent of my feeble capacity, of disseminating, as much as possible, the inexhaustible treasures to which this golden key admits the humblest votary of philosophical truth, I invite you, when you have sufficiently restored, replenished, refreshed, and exhilarated that osteosarchæmatosplanchnochondroneuromuelous, or to employ a more intelligible term, osseocarnisanguineoviscericartilaginonervomedullary, compages, or shell, the body, which at once envelops and develops that mysterious and inestimable kernel, the desiderative, determinative, ratiocinative, imaginative, inquisitive, appetitive, comparative, reminiscent, congeries of ideas and notions, simple and compound, comprised in the comprehensive denomination of mind, to take a peep, with me, into the mechanical arcana of the anatomicometaphysical universe. [...]"

snozzcumber

Etymology

Coined by Roald Dahl in The BFG (1982).

Noun

snozzcumber

  1. A type of vegetable that resembles a cucumber.
    • 1982, Roald Dahl, The BFG:
      "I will now show you a snozzcumber." The BFG flung open a massive cupboard and took out the weirdest looking thing Sophie had ever seen. It was about half as long again as an ordinary man but was much thicker. It was as thick around its girth as a perambulator. It was black with white stripes along its length. And it was covered all over with coarse knobbles.
      "Here is the repulsant snozzcumber!" cried the BFG, waving it about. "I squoggle it! I mispise it! I dispunge it! But because I is refusing to gobble up human beans like the other giants, I must spend my life guzzling up icky-poo snozzcumbers instead. If I don't I will be nothing but skin and groans."