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The Illustrated Compendium of Weirdly Specific Words: Including Bumbledom, Jumentous, Spaghettification, and More

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The Illustrated Compendium of Weirdly Specific Words is an illustrated dictionary of the 300+ most specific words in the English language, along with their definitions, roots, and (hilarious) usage quotes! Have you ever been lying in your bed, surrounded by crumbs and wrappers, feasting on your fifth pop tart and thought, I wish there was a word for this? Well, there is! Accubationis - the practice of eating and drinking while lying down. The English language is populated by many words that have a regular place in everyday conversation, and The Illustrated Compendium of Weirdly Specific Words celebrates these words by featuring definitions, origins and usage , and coupling illustrations . Words With more than 300 insanely specific words, you'd think that you would know a few of them, right? Well, think again! We're willing to wager that you don't know a single one of these words ! Unless, of course, you have a special interest in the smell of horse urine (the word for that particular odor is jumentuous ). The Illustrated Compendium of Weirdly Specific Words not only captures these words through equally specific illustrations, it also tells you what they mean! And like so many great reference books before it, it is organized in alphabetical order, from aglet to zopissa . Readers will close this book a little bit smarter than they were when they picked it up!

256 pages, Hardcover

Published March 3, 2020

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Nicki Markus.
Author 55 books298 followers
December 20, 2021
I received this book as a Secret Santa gift at work last week, and kudos to whoever picked it for me, because, interests-wise, this book is spot on, since I love anything about language(s). Unfortunately, the content of the book did not live up to the excellent topic choice of the purchaser. On the plus side, the illustrations were fun and I did come across a couple of words I hadn't heard of before. However, some of the words chosen for inclusion left me scratching my head. 'Fortnight' is an everyday British-English word I have used since I was a child, so describing a two-week period does not seem 'weirdly specific' to me. And why mention 'selfie'? That hardly seemed worthy of inclusion. I also found some of the cultural grouping in certain explanations a little off-putting, as it suggested a lack of proper research into the different cultures mentioned. Finally, the book needed better proofreading, as there were a number of errors, for example, one page containing words beginning with 'w' marked as 's'. There are other books out there similar to this that are far more scholarly and reliable, so for me, this book gets 2.5 stars. It might provide a bit of fun to some readers, but serious linguists and language-lovers would be better served elsewhere.
Profile Image for Courtney.
961 reviews57 followers
September 21, 2020
Sometimes. When I'm reading a book I reach a point where I stop and squint in, I don't know, but you know, that squint thing you do when something is suss.

And that was the explanation of the definition of a Hongi.

Look I'm not Maori but that definition was... not right. All indigenous cultures are not the same. Equating two seperate practices of two seperate cultures as the same thing when they aren't is... so very, very white and colonialist.

There are better books if you're a word nerd.

Profile Image for Debby Kean.
330 reviews3 followers
August 6, 2020
Weirdly disappointing. I ask myself, are all Americans so ignorant of the world outside the USA? She seems to be, and yes, she's been lumbered with a boy's name. Is there a connection? I have finished and sadly no, it didn't get any better. Memos to Ms Vendetti, in 10 years no one will no or care about Trump and that you hated him, or that you felt that you were a persecuted millennial. Also Jessica Mitford was not an American.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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