User:Squidonius/English words with uncommon properties

For the purposes of this article, any word which has appeared in a recognised general English dictionary published in the 20th century or later is considered a candidate. For interest, some archaic words, non-standard words and proper names are also included.

The treatment of words of foreign origin can be problematic. The entire history of English involves influence and loanwords from other languages, and this process continues today (see Foreign language influences in English). However, there is a grey area between foreign words and words accepted as English. The Oxford English Dictionary calls such words "resident aliens". Generally, a word of foreign origin is legitimate here if it may be encountered in an English text without translation.

Additionally, acronyms, abbreviations, contractions, interjections and non-anglophone proper names are not included as they are in a different lexical category.

Introduction

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A word is the smallest free form in a language, which can consist of a root or stem, and zero or more affixes. A word consisting of two or more stems joined together form a compound. A word combined with an already existing word or part of a word forms a portmanteau.

"Word" may refer to a spoken word or a written word: spoken words are made up of phonemes, the study of which is called phonetics, while written words are formed of graphemes, the study of which is called orthography. In some languages, such as English, the relationship between the two is complex allowing multiple variants and resulting in counterintuitive pronunciations.

This complexity is caused by a lack of a systematic spelling reform in English and the collision of multiple influences, notably Old English, Old Norse and French.[1]

Orthography

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The majority of words follow the general pattern of a syllable, which is typically made up of a syllable nucleus (most often a vowel) with optional initial and final margins (typically, consonants) therefore showing the limitations on articulation of sounds (phonotactic constraints). "Vowel" can mean either a phonetic vowel (which includes semivowels used as syllabic nucleus, such as y in my) or an orthographic vowel. In this section, the written form of the word is considered.

Many vowels

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It is important to note the difference between vowel letters and vowel sounds. A string of letters may represent a single vowel sound (like ea in head). This section deals with words that have many vowel letters, which may, however, represent a smaller number of vowel sounds. Unless otherwise specified, "vowels" here refers to the regular vowels, a, e, i, o, u.

Ondataouaouat, an old name for a native North American people,[2] has seven vowel letters in a row. Euouae (a type of cadence in mediæval music) contains six vowels in a row. It is a pseudo-word, however, formed from the vowels of the last six syllables of the "Gloria Patri" doxology: "seculorum. Amen". It is also often spelt evovae.[3] Kauaiian (of the Hawaiian island of Kauai) contains six consecutive vowels, and is sometimes used; however, Kauaian, with five vowels, is considered the standard form, per the Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary. Bossiaeeae (a tribe of flowering plants in the pea family, Family Fabaceae, endemic to Australia), Montesquieuian (pertaining to Montesquieu) and Zouaoua (a Berber tribe) also contain six consecutive vowels.

There is only one common word in English that has five vowels in a row: queueing. More unusual examples are cooeeing (making a "cooee" sound), miaoued or miaouing (from miaou, to make a sound like a cat; more commonly miaow or meow). Another candidate is zoaeae, a plural of zoaea. Zoaea, more commonly spelt zoea, is a larval stage in crustacean development. Those who write using the ligature "æ" may consider the singular to have only three vowels (zoæa). Capitalised words include Rousseauian (pertaining to the philosopher Rousseau), Outaouais (a region of Quebec), Aeaea or Aiaia (a location in Greek mythology) and the related adjectives Aeaean/Aiaian, "Brodiaea", a genus of cluster-lilies, and Iouea, a genus of sea sponges.

The list of words with four vowels in a row includes aqueous, Hawaiian, obsequious, onomatopoeia, pharmacopoeia, queue, queuer, miaou, sequoia, gooier, gooiest, archaeoastronomy, maieutics, giaour, plateaued, plateauing, radioautograph, Voodooienne, Iroquoian, Rousseauesque, Pompeiian, reliquiae, guaiacum, guaiac, homoiousian, prosopopoeia, mythopoeia, Niuean, Siouan, zoeae, Essaouiran, amongst a few others.

Proper names with four vowels in a row include: Louie (variant of Louis), Plataeae, Kauai, Kilauea, Douai, Rouault, Araguaia, Ushuaia and Piaui.

Examples of words consisting entirely of vowels, including proper names and some words already mentioned, are:

  • a (the indefinite article)
  • ʻaʻā, also written as plain aa (a geological term for a type of lava)
  • Aeaea or Aiaia (a location in Greek mythology)
  • ai (the three-toed sloth)
  • aia (a Brazilian bird, also a town in Spain)
  • Aiea (a town in Hawaii)
  • au (French for "to" or "at", encountered in English in compounds such as au pair and au fait)
  • euouae (a type of cadence in mediaeval music)
  • eau (French for "water", encountered in English in compounds such as eau de cologne)
  • Eiao (one of the Marquesas Islands)
  • I (first person pronoun)
  • Iao (a Polynesian god)
  • I'i (a figure in Polynesian mythology) – contains a consonant, but not one written with a letter generally recognized as a consonant in English.
  • Io (a figure in Greek mythology, also a moon of Jupiter)
  • Iouea (a genus of sea sponges)
  • O (interjection)
  • oe (a whirlwind in the Philippines)
  • Oea (the name under which Tripoli was founded by the Phoenicians)
  • oi (an impolite exclamation used to gain someone's attention)
  • ʻōʻō (a Hawaiian bird).

Exclamations such as oooo, aaaa and eeee are not normally considered legitimate words.

Other words that have a high proportion of vowels, including some proper names, are as follows.

  • 6 letters, 1 consonant:
    • Aeolia (a region now in Turkey)
    • Eogaea (a supposed ancient continent)
    • Euboea (a Greek island)
    • ooecia (plural of ooecium, part of the reproductive system of some primitive animals)
    • zoaeae, Aeaean/Aiaian, eunoia
  • 7 letters, 1 consonant:
    • ouabaio (an African tree that yields the poison ouabain)
  • 8 letters, 2 consonants:
    • aboideau or aboiteau (a sluice gate)
    • aureolae (plural of aureola, a halo)
    • Beaulieu (a village in Hampshire, England)
    • epopoeia (variant of epopee, an epic poem)
    • eulogiae (plural of eulogia, holy bread in an Eastern Orthodox ritual)
    • quiaquia (a type of fish)
  • 9 letters, 2 consonants:
  • 9 letters, 3 consonants:
    • audacious (extremely bold or daring)
    • audiobook (a recorded reading of a book)
    • beauteous (beautiful)
    • leukaemia (cancer of the blood; British English spelling)
  • 10 letters, 3 consonants:
    • autoecious (pertaining to a fungus that completes all stages of its life cycle on one host)
    • eudaimonia (happiness, prosperity)
  • 11 letters, 3 consonants:
  • 12 letters, 3 consonants:
    • Saurauiaceae (a plant family)
  • 12 letters, 4 consonants:
    • onomatopoeia (use of words that make the sounds they describe)

Containing all the vowels

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The word Iouea, a genus of sea sponges, contains all five regular vowels and no other letters. Other short words containing all the regular vowels are eunoia at six letters, followed by sequoia (and a variety of rarer words such as Aeonium, eulogia, miaoued) at seven. The shortest words with all six vowels (including y) are oxygeusia (an abnormally acute sense of taste), Oxyuridae (a family of parasitic nematodes), Oxyurinae (a sub-family of ducks), and aeriously (meaning "airily"; see below), with nine letters. Oxyuriases (plural of oxyuriasis) has ten letters; Oxyuroidea (an order of nematodes; see below) has ten letters, including a second o.

There are many words that feature all five regular vowels occurring only once in alphabetical order, the most common being abstemious and facetious. Two of the shortest, at eight letters, are caesious and anemious (OED); and aerious (OED) has only seven letters. Some others are abstentious, acheilous, arsenious, arterious, tragedious, fracedinous, and Gadsprecious (all in OED). Considering y as a vowel, the suffix -ly can be added to a number of these words; thus the shortest word containing six unique vowels in alphabetical order is aeriously, with nine letters (OED); the much more common facetiously has eleven letters.

Subcontinental, uncomplimentary and unnoticeably are common words having the five vowels once only in reverse order. One of the shortest such words, at eight letters, is Muroidea, a superfamily of rodents.

Dasyuroidea (a superfamily of marsupials; in OED) has the full set of six vowels including y once only in reverse order, but with an extra a preceding. Oxyuroidea (in OED; ten letters) has o preceding the sequence of vowels in reverse order, and it may be the shortest with such a sequence.

Faulconbridge is a town in the Blue Mountains of NSW, Australia. The town's name uses half of the alphabet, including all five vowels, and does not use any individual letter twice.

No vowels but y

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As mentioned, in order for a word to be spoken, it needs to have a syllabic nucleus, called a (phonetic) vowel. However, there is a difference between a written (orthographic) vowel and a spoken (phonetic) vowel: this is the case of w and y. In fact, for historical reasons, the letter y has been classed as a consonant or semivowel.[4]

A large number of Modern English words spell the /ɪ/ or /aɪ/ sound with the letter y, a few examples of these are my, by, try, sky, why, wry, fry, gym, hymn, lynx, lynch, myth, pygmy, gypsy, myrrh, nymph, lymph, tryst,[5] flyby, syzygy[6], rhythms, nymphly[7] and symphysy.[8] The word twyndyllyngs, an archaic word for twin, has been cited by Guinness World Records as the longest,[9][verification needed] though it is not in the Oxford English Dictionary (cf.[10]).

In English, words that possess y as a vowel are of several origins, such as Germanic or Greek origin where the letter is a transliteration of the ᚣ yr rune or the Greek letter υ, upsilon.[11][12]

No vowels but w

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Like the letter y, the letter w can serve as both a consonant and orthographic vowel; for example, how is pronounced /hau/ (with w representing the second half of the diphthong.)

The word cwm (pronounced "koom", defined as a steep-walled hollow on a hillside) is a rare case of a word used in English in which w represents a nucleus vowel, as is crwth (pronounced "krooth", a type of stringed instrument). Both words are in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. They derive from the Welsh use of w to represent a vowel. The word cwm is commonly applied to Welsh place names; cwms of glacial origin are a common feature of Welsh geography. It is also used to describe features in the Himalayas. The Welsh town Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch also uses w as a vowel.

Both these examples may be classified as "words of foreign origin", as they are actual words in the Welsh language which have been absorbed into English. See coombe as the south-west English equivalent of cwm.

No vowels

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A number of vowelless onomatopoeic vocalisations exist (mmm, grrr etc.), which may or may not be considered "words". The verb tsktsk (making a "tsktsk" sound) appears in Chambers Dictionary, making tsktsks, seven letters and no vowels, possible. nth (an unspecified ordinal number) is included in many dictionaries.

Many consonants

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The longest word with only one vowel is strengths (9 letters), packing six consonant sounds into a single syllable. The words psychorhythms (13), rhythmlessly (12) and polyrhythms (11) are longer, but each clearly uses the letter y as a vowel. The nine-letter tsktsking is also feasible. Eight-letter words with just one vowel are also fairly rare—as well as strength itself, some examples are schmaltz, schnapps and twelfths, along with the surname Schwartz.

Candidates for words with seven consonants in a row are Twelfthstreet (normally two words but sometimes written as one, as in a song title; Eighthstreet is feasible by analogy), and Hirschsprung, as in Hirschsprung's disease (though this is after a Danish surname). The scientific name of the white (or Tubergen) squill is Scilla mischtschenkoana, and the transliterations of several Russian names, such as Tischtschenko, contain the same constellation of seven consonants.

The place-name Knightsbridge has six consonants in a row (with four consonant sounds), as do the compound words catchphrase, latchstring, sightscreen, watchspring and watchstrap, and the somewhat more obscure borschts (plural of borscht, a type of soup from Eastern Europe), the German-derived festschrift (a collection of writings honouring a noted academic), Eschscholzia (a plant genus) and bergschrund (a glacier crevasse).

Apart from words already mentioned (and their plurals), long words with just two, three, and four vowels include Christchurch, spendthrifts, stretchmarks, scratchcards (2 vowels, 12 letters); farthingsworths, shillingsworths, strengthfulness (3, 15); and handcraftsmanship, splanchnemphraxis (4, 17).

Alternating vowels and consonants

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The superlatively long word honorificabilitudinitatibus (27 letters), Shakespeare's longest word, alternates consonants and vowels, as do the slightly more prosaic medical terms hepatoperitonitis and mesobilirubinogen (both 17 letters). The longest such words that are reasonably well known may be overimaginative, parasitological and verisimilitudes (all 15 letters). As a country, United Arab Emirates (18 letters) is unsurpassed for length in its vowel/consonant alternation.

The longest alternating words beginning with a vowel are possibly the 16-letter adenolipomatosis (a glandular condition), aluminosilicates (a class of chemical compounds containing aluminium and silicon) and anatomicomedical (relating to anatomy and medicine).

Theopneustia (an obscure word for Christian divine inspiration) alternates pairs of vowels and consonants.

Doubled, tripled, and quadrupled letters

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Many words have doubled letters, however triple letters, according to the OED are forbidden and are written as doubles.[13] However, several triple letter words are accepted as alternative forms, including Esssse, a spelling used for the word ash in a 14th-century text, has four of the same letter in sequence.[14] A few English words have three of the same letter in sequence, such as Aaadonta, a genus of snails, but most such words are constructions involving a suffix, and could arguably be hyphenated or, in some cases, written as two words. The OED accepts frillless,[15] but not goddessship, headmistressship, willless and bulllike. In some fabrication plants, scrap is called offfall (non-OED), though a hyphen (off-fall) is nearly universal. This suggests that similar material could be described as offfalllike. The term Wiiitis has been used to describe soreness resulting from overuse of the Nintendo Wii game console.[16]

Other candidates are the archaic agreeeth (third person singular present tense of the verb to agree), Cavaticovelia aaa (a Hawaiian water bug), and tweeer (comparative adjective of the qualifier twee meaning infantilely kitsch), though comparison to freer and seer argues against the third e. The use of tree as a transitive verb meaning "to drive up a tree" makes the dog the tree-er and the cat the tree-ee. There are also many possessives ending in -ss's (e.g. actress's). The term cryptozoology means the study of hidden animals and oology is the study of eggs; this implies that the study of hidden eggs could be described as cryptooology.

Place-names include Rossshire and Invernessshire, both in Scotland, UK (though both of these counties are usually hyphenated in official documentation), and Kaaawa in Hawaiʻi (although this is a common misspelling of Kaʻaʻawa in Hawaiian, the ʻokina being a glottal stop). The famous Welsh placename Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch appears to contain the letter l four times in a row, but the llll is in fact the single Welsh digraph ll twice, rather than four ls; the name was in fact concocted in the 1860s as a publicity stunt.

Bookkeeper has three consecutive doubled letters (subbookkeeper, which has four, seems to have been invented by word puzzlists). Another invented word with four double-letters in a row is balloonneer (one that controls a balloon). There is also a section of a fly rod called a hookkeeper. Sweet-toothed and hoof-footed are hyphenated examples. Many words have two consecutive doubled letters; examples are roommate, balloon, coffee, woolly, and succeed. The word possessionlessness has four non-consecutive sets of doubled letters; examples of common words with three sets are addressee, committee and keenness.

The letters j, q, x and y appear doubled only in words imported from other languages or proper names (e.g. hajj, Zaqqum, Exxon, Hayyim). Doubled a, h, i, k, u, v and w are also rare in English, with hh and ww occurring only in compounds. Examples include:

  • a: 'aa, aardvark, aardwolf, aasvogel, baa, baal, baaskaap, balmacaan, bazaar, Canaan, craal, ethylenediaminetetraacetate, graal, haaf, haar, kamaaina, kraal, laager, laari, maar, markkaa, naan, praam, quaalude, rufiyaa, salaam, wadmaal
  • h: bathhouse, beachhead, fishhook, hashhead, highhanded, hitchhike, roughhewn, roughhouse, sleuthhound, touchhold, washhouse, withhold
  • i: aalii, alibiing, assagaiing, bacchii, biischial, chivariing, congii, coniing, denarii, filariid, foliiform, euphausiid, gastrocnemii, genii, incuvariid, medii, nauplii, obiism, piing, radii, reduviid, retiarii, safariing, sartorii, senarii, septenarii, sextarii, shanghaiing, shiitake, skiing, splenii, taxiing, teiid, tholeiite, torii, trapezii, triiodothyronines, zombiism [17]
  • k: bookkeeper, chukka, dekko, hokku, jackknife, knickknack, lockkeeper, markka, pukka, quokka, shikker, stockkeeper, sukkah, tikka, trekked, yakked, zikkurat
  • u: continuum, duumvir, menstruum, muumuu, residuum, squush, triduum, vacuum, weltanschauung
  • v: bevvy, bivvy, civvies, chivvy, divvy, flivver, navvy, revving, savvy, skivvy
  • w: arrowwood, arrowworm, bowwow, glowworm, hollowware, meadowwort, powwow, screwworm, strawweight, slowworm, wilowware, yellowworm, yellowwood

Many repeated letters

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The following table lists words that repeat the given letter many times. The number of repetitions is shown in parentheses. If the word with the most repetitions is dubious (for example, it is hyphenated, arguably should be hyphenated, is a proper name, or seems artificial) then further candidates with fewer repetitions are offered. Where there are many candidate words with the same number of repetitions only the shortest or most common (judged subjectively) is listed.

a taramasalata (6) – a fish roe paste
Galatasaray (5) – a Turkish football team
b bibble-babble (6) – babble
flibbertigibbet (4) – a silly woman
c pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (6) – a famously long word for a respiratory disease
micrococcic (5) – relating to micrococcus, a type of bacterium
sacrococcygeal (4) – pertaining to both the sacrum and the coccyx
d diddle-daddled (7) – wasted time
dodecadodecahedron (5) – a type of polyhedron (solid geometrical figure)
e ethylenediaminetetraacetate (7) – a chemical compound, used as a drug
degenerescence (6) – decay
beekeeper (5)
effervescence (5)
f riffraff (4) – undesirable people
g Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchaubunagungamaugg (15) – the name of a lake in Massachusetts
hugger-muggering (5) – acting secretly
giggling (4) – laughing in a silly manner
h High-Churchmanship (5) – the state of being a High-Churchman, that is, supporting the High Church (a faction of the Anglican church)
Rhamphorhynchus (4) – a genus of pterosaur or orchid
i floccinaucinihilipilification (9) – a famously long word meaning "the action of estimating as worthless"
indivisibilities[18] (7) – plural of indivisibility
indivisibility (6) – the state of being indivisible
j jejunojejunostomy (4) – a surgical procedure carried out on the intestine
k knickknack (4) – a small article of little value
l Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch (11) – a town in Wales
lillypilly (5) – an Australian tree
lulliloo (4) – to welcome joyously
m mammogram (4) – a breast X-ray
n nonannouncement (6) – absence of an announcement
inconveniencing (5) – causing difficulty for
o pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (9) – a famously long word for a respiratory disease
Woolloomooloo (8) – the name of a suburb of Sydney, Australia
Chrononhotonthologos (7) – the name of a play by English writer Henry Carey
odontonosology (6) – dentistry
p hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia (5) – the fear of long words
whippersnapper (4) – a young, impertinent person
q Qaraqalpaq (3) – a Central-Asian language
Albuquerque (2) – a city in New Mexico
quinquennium (2) – a period of five years
riqq (2) – a type of Egyptian tambourine
quinquevir (2) – one of five commissioners appointed for some special object
r strawberry-raspberry (6) – a Japanese plant
refrigerator (4) – an appliance for keeping food cool
s possessionlessness (8) – the state of being without possessions
senselessness (6) – lack of sense
t tittle-tattle (6) – gossip
anticonstitutionalist (5) – someone who opposes a constitution
u humuhumunukunukuapuaʻa (9) – a Hawaiian fish
unscrupulous (4) – lacking morals
muumuu (4) – a loose dress of Hawaiian origin
v ovoviviparous (3) – producing eggs that hatch within the body
w wow-wow (4) – a type of gibbon
powwow (3) – a Native American gathering
swallowwort (3) – any of several plants
williwaw (3) – a certain wind phenomenon
willowware (3) – Household china decorated with a blue-on-white design depicting a willow tree and often a river
x hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia (3) – fear of the number 666
hexahydroxycyclohexane (3) – a chemical compound, part of the vitamin B complex
executrix (2) – a female executor
exonarthex (2) – the entrance to a church
exotoxin (2) – a soluble protein
maxixe (2) – a Brazilian dance, and also a vegetable popular there known in English as West Indian Gherkin, Burr Gherkin or Burr Cucumber.
y polysyndactyly (4) – webbing of the hands or feet
syzygy (3) – a kind of astronomical coordination or alignment
z zenzizenzizenzic (6) – the eighth power or exponent of a number
razzmatazz (4) – showy spectacle
pizzazz (4) – the quality of being showy or attractive

Ignoring the 20-letter play title Chrononhotonthologos, the longest words containing only one of the five regular vowels (overlooking y) may be the 17-letter proctocolonoscopy and synchrocyclotrons. Long words with only one of the six vowels including y are the 15-letter defencelessness and respectlessness.

A candidate for longest word containing only one type of consonant is the 10-letter couci-couci, a word borrowed from French and meaning "so-so", "neither good nor bad".[19] 9-letter words are allolalia (a speech disturbance) and Coccaceae (an obsolete name for a family of bacteria).

Words containing the same sequence of letters multiple times are often relatively uninteresting, being formed by reduplication (e.g. higgledy-piggledy, namby-pamby), repetition of the same word or essentially the same word (countercountermeasure, gastrogastrostomy, benzeneazobenzene), or compounding (handstands, foreshores, nightlight). Some other examples, with the repeated sequence in brackets followed by the number of repetitions, include: nationalisation (ation, 2), undergrounder (under, 2), patinating (atin, 2), assesses (sses, 2), Mississippi (issi, 2), hotshots (hots, 2), Teteté (te, 3), expressionlessness (ess, 3), phosphophorin (pho, 3), Pitjantjatjara (tja, 3), tintinnabulating (tin, 3), nonconfrontation (on, 4), trans-Panamanian (an, 4), banana (ana, 2), assassination (ass, 2).

Long words with just two, three, four, etc. distinct letters include booboo, deeded, muumuu, Teteté (2 distinct letters, 6 letters in total); assesses, referrer (3, 8); senselessness (4, 13); defenselessness (6, 15); disinterestedness (7, 17); and institutionalisation (8, 20).

Isograms

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Words in which no letter is used more than once are called isograms (though its use in this sense is jargon restricted to those who enjoy recreational linguistics, and is not commonly found in dictionaries). Uncopyrightable, with fifteen letters, is the longest common isogram in English (some also allow uncopyrightables). Hydropneumatics, misconjugatedly, and dermatoglyphics share the distinction but are less well-known; subdermatoglyphic is two letters longer but even more obscure – it has only one report of alleged live use (an article in Annals of Dermatology), and supposedly means "of or pertaining to the patterns on the lower skin layers."

Sometimes isograms are defined as words in which each letter appears the same number of times, not necessarily just once. Probably the most common ten-letter word of this kind is intestines. Long examples in which each letter appears twice are scintillescent (an obscure word for sparkling or twinkling), Cicadellidae (a family of insects), Gradgrindian (in the manner of Gradgrind, a character in Dickens' novel Hard Times noted for his soulless devotion to facts and statistics), happenchance (chance circumstance), and trisectrices (plural of trisectrix, a type of geometrical curve). Long isograms in which each letter appears three times include sestettes (plural of sestette, a variant of sestet or sextet), and the fairly uninteresting cha-cha-cha (a type of dance music). The words senescence and arraigning have four distinct letters, each of which appears an even number of times. The word unprosperousness has seven such letters.

Unusual word endings

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Dreamt and its derivatives are the only English words that end in mt.

Despite the assertions of a well-known puzzle, modern English does not have three common words ending in -gry. Angry and hungry are the only ones. There are, however, a number of rare and obsolete words, such as aggry; see -gry for a further discussion.

Excluding derivatives, there are only two words in English that end -shion (though many words end in this sound). These are cushion and fashion (derivatives include pincushion, refashion and misfashion). Additionally, parishioner is the only other common word that contains -shion-, though it does not end in it. There are a few other dialectical or obsolete words with this ending, notably the Scottish terms fushion "energy, wholesomeness (food)" or rare dialectical hushion "a type of footless stocking, a leg-warmer"; the word parishion as a synonym for parishioner was formally occasionally used.[20]

There are only three common English words ending in -cion. These are coercion, scion, and suspicion (another is the less-common cion).

-mt and -gry are possibly the best-known unusual word endings, but there are many others exhibited by only one or two everyday words. Some examples, excluding derivative words, are -ln (kiln, Lincoln, wedeln),-tl (axolotl, Quetzalcoatl, atlatl, Kwakiutl, Nahuatl, rotl, shtetl, Ueueteotl), -dl (dirndl, dreidl – the latter is one of several variant spellings of dreidel), -bt (doubt, debt), -igy (effigy, prodigy, beigy), -nen (linen), and -cay (decay, Biscay).

Several English verbs end in -cede (for example: accede, concede, precede, and intercede), but only two English words end in -sede: supersede and obsede (the latter being another word for "obsess").

There are similarly few words ending in -v. Examples found in English dictionaries, including some words of foreign origin, are chav, lev, shiv, Slav, Yugoslav, spiv and tav. Abbreviations and acronyms that have to a greater or lesser extent attained the status of words include derv (diesel fuel), guv (British informal term of respectful address, from governor), lav (lavatory), luv (love), perv (pervert), rev (as of an engine, from revolution), improv (short for improvisation), sov (British, old-fashioned, for sovereign, the coin), and maglev (a form of rail transport that uses magnetic levitation). There are also numerous place-names and personal names, especially of Russian or Eastern European origin, such as Kiev, Chekhov, Molotov, Prokofiev.

There are also not many words ending in "-j". The most common examples are taj, raj, hajj, swaraj (Indian independence), and ghanouj (as in baba ghanouj).

Even more obscure, but nonetheless appearing in some English dictionaries, are the words shantih (in OED, a word meaning "peace")[21] and smaragd (in OED, a shortened form of smaragdine, an emerald),[22] which are the only English words ending in -ih and -gd, respectively.

Unusual word beginnings

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Words beginning with a double letter are rare. The most common combination is probably oo- (oodles, oolong, oomph, oops, ooze, and a number of less familiar examples, mostly technical words incorporating the prefix oo-, meaning "egg"), followed by aa- (familiar examples being aardvark and Aaron), and ee- (eel, eerie, eek, eesome).

Otherwise such words are unlikely to be considered part of the English vocabulary, and almost entirely of foreign origin. Some examples are Ccoya (Inca queen), ʻiʻiwi (a Hawaiian bird), llama, llano (a grassy plain), and llanero (someone who lives on a llano). There are, however, numerous Welsh placenames beginning Ll- (e.g. Llandudno, Llanberis)—plus the familiar personal names Lloyd and Llewel(l)yn—and a smaller number beginning Ff- (e.g. Ffestiniog, Ffrith). There are also some English personal names that start with Ff-, often spelled all in lowercase by convention, such as ffolkes and ffiona. A number of Japanese names begin Ii- (double i) when transliterated into the Roman alphabet.

The words euouae, Aeaea and euoi, mentioned earlier under "Many vowels", start with six, five and four vowels respectively. There are very few other words starting with four vowels. Some proper name examples are: El Aaiún (a city in Western Sahara), Aeaetes (a character in Greek mythology), ʻAiea (a town in Hawaiʻi), Aouad (personal name), Aouita (personal name), Euaechme (a character in Greek mythology), Ueueteotl (an Aztec god) and El Ouaer (a retired Tunisian football goalkeeper).

The list of words starting with three vowels is rather longer, but most are obscure. Some of the more familiar examples are: aeolian (relating to the wind), aeon (an age), aoudad (a sheep-like animal of northern Africa), eau (French for "water", encountered in English in compounds such as eau de Cologne), Iain (personal name), oeuvre (an artist's body of work), Ouagadougou (capital of the African country Burkina Faso), and ouija (a board used by mediums to reveal spirit messages). Aeolian and aeon are British English spellings.

There are similarly few English words beginning with a large number of consonants. Tsktsks appears in Collins Dictionary. The words crwth and cwtch (of Welsh origin) might be claimed to consist of five consonants, but the "w" clearly functions as a vowel. There is also a surname Schkrohowsky of Russian origin, and The Oxford Companion to Music lists Schtscherbatchew as an alternative spelling (which is a transliteration into the German language) of the surname of Russian composer Vladimir Shcherbachov, although in the Cyrillic alphabet, 'shch' is but one character щ.

There are a reasonable number of words beginning with four consonants. The commonest beginnings are phth- (phthalein, phthisis, Phthirus, phthisiology) and sch- (mostly words of German/Yiddish origin such as schlep, schmaltz, schnapps, schwarmerei, schwa). Other examples are chthonic, pschent, sphragide and tshwala.

A selective list of words with other unusual initial letter combinations follows. Unsurprisingly, many are of foreign origin: bdellium, bwana, cnemis, ctenoid (comb-like), czar, dghaisa (a Maltese rowing boat), dvandva, dziggetai (a Mongolian wild ass), fjord, Gbari (an African language), gmelina, jnana, kgotla (in southern Africa, a meeting place), kshatriya, kvetch, kwacha, kwanza, Kwanzaa, mbaqanga, mho, mnemonic, mridanga, Mwera (an African language), mzungu (in East Africa, a white person), Ndebele, ngaio, ngwee, oquassa (a type of North American trout), pfennig, pneumonia, ptarmigan, pzazz (glamour; compare "pizazz"), qawwali, qintar, qoph, sforzando, sfumato (these two being from Italian, in which any consonant in the Italian alphabet but s or z may follow an initial s), sgraffito, sjambok, svelte, tmesis, tsunami, tzar, vlei (in southern Africa, a seasonally flooded area), vroom (a revving sound), xcatik (kind of chilli found in Yucatán), Xhosa, xiphoid, xoanon (a carved wooden icon), xtabentún (Mayan liqueur), Yggdrasil, ylem, ynambu (a South American bird), yttrium, ytterbium, zloty, zweiback, zwitterion, and zwinger (originating from German).

Q without U

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Containing the letters a, b, c, d...

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Boldface and feedback are the shortest words that contain all the letters from a to f. The only English word that contains every letter from A to G is "blackfigured" (referring to a type of pottery decoration).[23] "Blackfigured" can be spelled either without a hyphen or more commonly with a hyphen according to the Oxford English Dicitionary. Feedbacking or deboldfacing may be acceptable in some usage. Double-refracting is a hyphenated example.

The shortest words with a, b, c, d, and e in any order are 6-letter words abduce, backed, beclad, braced, cabbed (the only six-letter example with only the first five letters of the alphabet), cabled, and decarb. The shortest word containing these letters in order without repetitions is absconder.

The longest word consisting entirely of letters from the first half of the alphabet (a through m) may be Hamamelidaceae (a plant family) at 14 letters. Long common words include fickleheaded (12 letters), fiddledeedee (12), blackballed (11), and blackmailed (11).

Among the longest words consisting only of the letters a through g (the names of the notes of a musical scale) are: cabbaged (past tense of "to cabbage", meaning to steal), debagged (past tense of "to debag", meaning to remove the trousers of), Fabaceae and Fagaceae (all 8 letters).

Soupspoons (10) consists entirely of letters from the second half of alphabet, as does the hyphenated topsy-turvy and a number of rarer 10-letter words such as nonsupport (failure to support), puttyroots (plural of puttyroot, normally spelt putty-root: a species of orchid), and zoosporous (relating to a zoospore, a type of fungal or algal spore).

Zzyzx, a location in California, and zyzzyx, a type of wasp, consist of only the last three letters of the alphabet.

Typewriter words

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The longest words spelt solely with the left hand when typing properly using a QWERTY keyboard may be the 14-letter aftercataracts (secondary cataracts of the eye) and sweaterdresses (plural of sweaterdress, a knitted dress). The longest common words are the 12-letter abracadabras, aftereffects, desegregated, desegregates, extravagates, extravagated, reaggregated, reaggregates, resegregated, resegregates, reverberated, reverberates, stewardesses, sweaterdress, and watercresses.

The 13-letter chemical name phyllophyllin can be typed solely with the right hand. The longest such word that is reasonably common is the 9-letter polyphony. The phrase Hoi polloi is another 9-letter example. Lollipop is an 8-letter example.

Common words of ten letters that can be spelled solely with the top line of letters on a QWERTY keyboard include perpetuity, prerequire, proprietor, repertoire, and typewriter. If hyphens are allowed, teeter-totter stands out as the longest word at 12 letters. There are at least two eleven-letter words, both rare: proterotype and rupturewort. Nine-letter examples include etiquette, eyepopper, pirouette, potpourri, preterite, propretor, propriety, prototype, puppeteer, puttyroot, repertory, territory, typewrite, and typewrote.

The nine-letter word Haggadahs is the longest word that can be typed solely on the middle row of the keyboard. The eight-letter words ashfalls, alfalfas, Falashas, Hadassah, Haggadah, Halakahs, Halalahs, and Haskalah can all be typed on the middle row of letters on the keyboard. The longest such common word is probably the seven-letter alfalfa.

Almost no English word takes its letters exclusively from the bottom row of letters on a keyboard, since neither vowels nor pseudo-vowels reside on this row – though there are onomatopoeic exceptions such as zzz and mmm.

Letters in alphabetical order

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The longest words whose letters are in alphabetical order include the eight-letter Aegilops (a grass genus), and the seven-letter addeems (from the archaic verb addeem, meaning to award), alloquy (an archaic or literary word for an address), beefily (in a beefy manner), billowy (like a wave or surge), dikkops (a South African bird) and gimmors (plural of gimmor, an old-fashioned word for a mechanical contrivance). Many six-letter words have this property.

In reverse alphabetical order are the nine-letter spoonfeed and the eight-letter spoonfed and trollied.

There are a number of words that contain a string of four consecutive letters of the alphabet. The most common combination is rstu, with most examples having the prefix under-, over- or super- (e.g. understudy, overstuff, superstud). Words with the combination mnop include cremnophobia (a fear of steep slopes), gymnopaedic (of birds, having unfeathered young), limnophilous (marsh-loving) and Prumnopitys (a genus of conifers). Chelmno, a town in Poland, has the unusual combination lmno.

The most common words formed only from consecutive letters of the alphabet are hi and no. Others are ab (short for abdominal), de (arguably foreign), def (slang word meaning excellent), ef (the name of the letter f), ghi (a variant spelling of ghee) and op (short for operation).

Palindromes

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A palindrome is a word or phrase that is spelled the same whether read forward or backward, disregarding punctuation – such as "Madam, I'm Adam", or a longer version "Madam in Eden, I'm Adam". The longest common single-word palindromes are redivider, Malayalam (മലയാളം – a south Indian language), and evitative.

Kangaroo words

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A kangaroo word is a word that contains all letters of another word, in order, with the same meaning. Examples include masculine (male), observe (see), and inflammable (flammable).

First and last words by reversed spelling

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In a dictionary that listed the reversed spellings of words alphabetically, some of the first entries (excluding proper names) would be:

  • a (=a, the indefinite article)
  • aa (=aa, a type of lava)
  • aab (=baa, the sound made by a sheep)
  • aahc (=chaa, a variant of char, British slang for tea)

Some proper names would appear earlier: aabbirem (=Meribbaa, a Biblical name); aabmup (=Pumbaa); aabre (=Erbaa, a town in Turkey); aacisuan (=Nausicaa); aaemu (=Umeaa); aagsin (=Nisga'a).

The first entries that correspond to common words (including some proper names) would be, in normal letter order, casaba, Abba, Sheba, amoeba, Toshiba, Elba, melba, mamba, samba.

The last several entries would include:

  • zzuh (=huzz, to buzz or murmur)
  • zzuks (=skuzz, variant of scuzz)
  • zzul (=luzz, British slang, meaning to chuck)
  • zzum (=muzz, British slang, meaning to confuse)
  • zzurf (=fruzz, to brush hair the wrong way)
  • zzz (=zzz, the sound of a person snoring)

First and last words in anagram dictionary

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Suppose that, in a dictionary of anagrams, the letters of each word are sorted into alphabetical order (for example, "alphabet" becomes "aabehlpt"), and then the resulting strings are themselves sorted alphabetically. After the words a and aa, some of the first few words in the dictionary (including only the singular form of nouns) would be:

  • aaaaaalmrsstt (=taramasalata, a fish roe paste)
  • aaaaaannrstyy (=Satyanarayana, another name for Vishnu)
  • aaaaabbcdrr (=abracadabra, a word said when performing a magic trick)

The end of the list might appear something like:

Scrabble

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The highest-scoring words that would fit on a Scrabble board are benzoxycamphors (45), sesquioxidizing (42) (sesquioxidized is in the OED), or oxyphenbutazone (41) (in both the TWL06 and SOWPODS official Scrabble dictionaries). With the Q and Z fortuitously on the double-letter-score squares, 'sesquioxidizing' played across an edge of the board (which has three triple-word squares) could score (62 × 27) + 50 = 1724 by itself (the additional 50 points being awarded for using all seven letters on the player's own rack), thus more than doubling the high score for an entire game in the English language Scrabble, 830, set by Michael Cresta in 2006.[24] Benzoxycamphors would score (59 × 27) + 50 = 1643 while oxyphenbutazone would score (54 × 27) + 50 = 1508. Since there are only 7 letters to play in a turn, 8 of the 15 letters of these words need to be on the board already.[25] Using SOWPODS words only in the rest of the game, single-move scores could hypothetically be obtained of 1785 points with oxyphenbutazone and 2044 points with sesquioxidizing.[26]

Pyramid words

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A pyramid word contains a single occurrence of one letter, two of another letter, three of the next, etc. The longest examples have four occurrences of the most common letter. Common examples are Ararat, banana, papaya, sleeveless, deadheaded and sereneness. Others include rememberer, restresses, palilalial, chachalaca, kotukutuku, susurruses and Sassanians. In addition, Tennessee's and peppertree have been cited by Richard Lederer, with an analysis of some other interesting properties of the latter.[27]

Long words

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Antidisestablishmentarianism listed in the Oxford English Dictionary, was considered[who?] the longest English word for quite a long time, but today the medical term pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is usually considered[who?] to have the title, despite the fact that it was coined to provide an answer to the question "What is the longest English word?".[citation needed]

The Guinness Book of Records, in its 1992 and subsequent editions, declared the "longest real word" in the English language to be floccinaucinihilipilification at 29 letters. Defined as the act of estimating (something) as worthless, its usage has been recorded as far back as 1741.[citation needed]

The two longest words in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary are 27-letter words ethylenediaminetetraacetate and electroencephalographically.

Chemical nomenclature of organic compounds and especially proteins can easily beat any record, as official nomenclature rules lead to legitimate names thousands of letters long.

Orthographically longest one-syllable word

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Contenders with eleven letters include squirrel(l)ed and brougham(m)ed; there are numerous ten-letter candidates, including schmaltzed, scrootched, and scraunched.

See also #Phonetically longest one-syllable word.

"ough" words

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Sequences of words formed by the addition of letters

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The nine-word sequence I, in, sin, sing, sting, string, staring, starting (or starling), startling can be formed by successively adding one letter to the previous word. There are a number of other nine-word sequences that use only common words, and numerous shorter sequences, such as the seven-word a, at, rat, rate, irate, pirate, pirates or I, in, fin, find, fiend, friend, friends.

If tam (a type of cap) is accepted as a common English word, then a 10-word sequence is possible: a, am, tam, tame, tamed, teamed, steamed, streamed, streambed, streambeds (plural of streambed). (Streambed is the hydrological term for a channel through which a stream runs.)

If rare words, proper names and/or obsolete words are allowed then sequences of at least eleven words are possible. One example is: a, ma (mother), mac (raincoat, British), mace (spice), macle (mineral), macule (skin spot), maculae (plural of macula, variant of macule), maculate (blotchy), masculate (to make strong, obsolete), emasculate, emasculated.

Al, Ala, Alan, Alana, Alayna is a sequence consisting only of first names.

A seven-word sequence in which letters are added to the end of the previous word is: ma, max (used in phrases such as to the max), maxi (a long skirt), maxim, maxima (plural of maximum), maximal, maximals (plural of maximal, used as noun in mathematics). An eight-word sequence including proper nouns is: ta (thanks, British), tam (Scottish cap), Tama (asteroid), Tamar (English river), tamari (soy sauce), tamarin (monkey), tamarind (tree), tamarinds (plural form).

The one-syllable word are, with the addition of one letter, becomes area, a word with three syllables.

A six-word sequence in which letters are added to the beginning of the words is: hes (plural of he, used as a noun to mean a male), shes (plural of she), ashes, lashes, plashes (plural of plash, a splashing sound), splashes.

Phonetics

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Homophones

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Ewe and you are a pair of words with identical pronunciations that have no letters in common. Another example is the pair eye and I. However, such word pairs are often dependent on the accent of the speaker. For instance, Canadians might recognize a and eh as such a pair, whereas other English speakers might not. In Ireland, ewe and yo are homophonous also. An example of fourfold homophony is write, wright, rite, and right. The homonym with the most variant spellings is air with Aire, are, Ayer, Ayr, Ayre, err, e'er, ere, eyre and heir.

Rarely, pairs of homophones have opposite meanings. A well-known example is raise (to build or rise) and raze (to demolish or push down by force). The antonyms cleave (to split apart) and cleave (to adhere, or stick together) are homographs as well as homophones, as are patronize (to support) and patronize (to act condescendingly toward).

Phonetically longest one-syllable word

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There is no single longest one-syllable English word phonetically. "Stretched" (pronounced /stretched/) is often used as an example of a word with the maximum three consonant onset and four consonant coda.[citation needed]

Unrhymable words

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In the most common form of rhyme, words rhyme if they end in identically or nearly identically sounding syllables, and match in stress. If a word has an unusual or unique ending syllable and no other word has a stress pattern to match, it does not rhyme. While many polysyllabic words have no rhyme, only a handful of single-syllable words fit this description. Excluding disputed loan words, whose foreign sounds make them obviously difficult, such unrhymable English words include angst, breadth, depth, fifth, gulf, kiln, oblige (its second syllable is stressed), mulcts, ninth, and twelfth. Many of these words' plurals are also unrhymable. Although it has two syllables, orange is arguably the most famous unrhymable word,[28] though there exists a rare Sussex surname Gorringe[29] and a mountain in Wales named Blorenge.[30]

The word "purple" is also noted for its lack of rhymes,[31] though there is a rare word curple, meaning the hind quarters of a horse and a Scottish English word hirple meaning to walk with a limp. Silver is commonly considered unrhymable,[32] but in fact rhymes with chilver, a provincial English term meaning a ewe-lamb or ewe mutton. Note that some words rhyme if prefixed derivatives are allowed (like empurple or desilver), but these words do not form perfect rhymes.

The most common way to concoct a "rhyme" for such words—usually in humorous poetry—is to rhyme it with the first syllable of a word that is split over two lines, thus forming an enjambment (this is sometimes called Procrustean rhyme). An example is rhyming orange with car eng/ine, noted by Douglas Hofstadter, or Tom Lehrer's "Eating an orange/While making love/ Makes for bizarre enj/ Oyment thereof". Likewise, Stephen Sondheim rhymed silver with "will, ver-/bosity, and time",[33] and Willard R. Espy managed the couplet "I might distil Ver-/ona's silver".

A song famous for this style of rhyme was Arlo Guthrie's "Motorcycle Song".

Semantics

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Homographs

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Homographs are words with identical spellings but different meanings. A famous example is the town of Reading (pronounced to rhyme with threading) vs. the gerund reading, as in reading a book (pronounced to rhyme with feeding). At one time the bookseller Blackwell's had a branch in Reading, signed "Blackwells Reading Book Shop", in which either pronunciation made sense[citation needed].

Autological words

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Autological words (also called homological words) are words expressing properties which they themselves possess; they describe themselves. (E.g., the word “short” is short, “common” is common, “English” is English, and “pentasyllabic” has five syllables.) Words that lack this property are heterological. (E.g., “long” is not long, “hyphenated” isn’t hyphenated, and “monosyllabic” has more than one syllable.) These definitions are paradoxical. (Consider the word “heterological” itself; see the Grelling–Nelson paradox.)

Self-antonyms

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A few English words have such disparate definitions that one meaning is the opposite of another. These are called "self-antonyms", "auto-antonyms" or "contronyms". Examples include cleave or clip (joining things together or taking them apart), dust (remove fine particles or add fine particles, as in to dust a cake with sugar), fast (moving quickly or fixed in one spot), sanction (to give one's blessing or one's condemnation), enjoin (to cause something to be done, to forbid something from being done), and ravel (to unravel, to entangle). There are also rare instances of pairs of English words that are pronounced the same but have opposite meanings (e.g. raze and raise).

Antonyms formed by the addition of one letter

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There are rare examples of words whose meaning becomes the opposite through the addition of one letter. Fasted becoming feasted is one such example noted by Jane Bentley at the Marsa Alam wordfest. Typical/atypical and biotic/abiotic are similar but less striking examples, using the negative prefix a-.

Words with large numbers of meanings

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For many years, the word set had the longest entry in the Oxford English Dictionary, but it has now been supplanted by make. The top five longest entries in the Online Third Edition are make; set; run; take; go.[34]

Grammar

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Gender inflexion

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While common in other languages, unequivocal gender inflexion is rare in English. Many words that have separate male and female forms (e.g. chairman/chairwoman, headmaster/headmistress, aviator/aviatrix) may be best considered as gender-specific terms (that is, parallel to boy/girl) rather than true grammatical inflexions.

Some nouns, especially loanwords from Romance languages, retain their gender-inflected forms, for example alumnus has the feminine form alumna (plurals alumni and alumnae, respectively). That these are English inflexions is argued by the absence of other cases (e.g. "the Dean addressed the alumni", not "the Dean addressed alumnos"). A less clear case is masseur/masseuse (from French): in English, it could be argued that masseur is gender-neutral ("she was a good masseur"), and masseuse a conscious if familiar use of a foreign term.

There are a very few adjectives that decline for gender, the best known being perhaps blond: a blond man, but a blonde woman. Sometimes the same distinction is applied to brunet (masculine) and brunette (feminine). Similarly derived from French is "born (with the name)": Lewis Carroll né Charles Dodgson, but George Eliot née Mary Ann Evans. The common gender-declined word fiancé(e) is originally adjectival in French but substantivized as a noun in English.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Kenneth Katzner (2002). The languages of the world (3 ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415250047.
  2. ^ Alan Rayburn (2001). Naming Canada: stories about Canadian place names. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802082930.
  3. ^ Berry, Mary: "Evovae", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed April 6, 2006), [1]
  4. ^ OED page 200
  5. ^ "tryst". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  6. ^ "syzygy". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  7. ^ "nymphly". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  8. ^ "symphysy". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. ^ Guinness world records. Guinness World Records Ltd. 2011. ISSN 1475-7419.
  10. ^ "twyndyllyngs". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  11. ^ R. I. Page (1999). An Introduction to English Runes. Boydell Press, Woodbridge. ISBN 978-0-85115-768-9.
  12. ^ Translitteration chart of Greek
  13. ^ "English Dictionary, Thesaurus, & grammar help | Oxford Dictionaries".
  14. ^ "Esssse". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  15. ^ "frillless". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  16. ^ "If it's not tennis elbow, it may be "Wiiitis"". Reuters. 2007-06-06.
  17. ^ List words ending with ii
  18. ^ Google Book Search results for "indivisibilities"
  19. ^ Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases, 1911 Edition
  20. ^ Words ending in 'shion' apparently there are only 3, what are they?
  21. ^ "shantih". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  22. ^ "smaragd". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  23. ^ "How this was obtained by writing a program"
  24. ^ Fatsis, Stefan (2006-10-26). "830! How a carpenter got the highest Scrabble score ever. – By Stefan Fatsis – Slate Magazine". Slate.com. Retrieved 2010-04-06.
  25. ^ The Scrabble Omnibus, Gyles Brandreth, ISBN 0-00-218081-2
  26. ^ Record for the Highest Scoring Scrabble Move at scrabulizer.com. Retrieved 2008-05-30.
  27. ^ A man of my words: reflections on the English language, Richard Lederer, ISBN 0-312-31785-9
  28. ^ Held, Carl. Breaking the Orange Rhyme Barrier. Games. Issue 167 (Vol. 25, No. 1). Pp.10-13. February 2001.
  29. ^ From the television programme QI[season and episode needed]
  30. ^ Abergavenney Tourist Guide
  31. ^ Held, Carl. Orange, Silver, now Purple (More Lexical Lunacy). Games. Issue 207 (Vol. 29, No. 1). Pp.4-9, 16. February 2005.
  32. ^ Held, Carl. From Orange to Silver (More Lexical Lunacy). Games. Issue 200 (Vol. 28, No. 4). Pp.4-9, 16. May 2004.
  33. ^ "Letters". Time (magazine). May 24, 1971. Retrieved 2008-02-09. Sondheim would, and did: To find a rhyme for silver Or any "rhymeless" rhyme Requires only will, verBosity and time.
  34. ^ "Some observations on OED's March 2007 release of revised entries"
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