Words you use often that you don't know.
• Epeolatry: The worship of words. What better piece of vocabulary to kick off this list with?
• Aglet: The little piece of plastic on the end of your shoelaces. (Also a great name for a cat, if you ask certain Curiosity editors.)
• Grawlix: You know when cartoonists substitute a bunch of punctuation marks for curse words? They're using grawlix.
• Borborygmus: A rumbling in your stomach. Time for lunch!
• Accubation: While you quell your borborygmus, you might engage in accubation — the act of comfortably reclining, often during a meal.
• Jillick: To skip a stone across a surface of water.
• Nibling: Here's a handy word you might just now realize you were missing. "Nibling" is a gender-neutral term for a niece or nephew.
• Tatterdemalion: Some words just sound like their meaning. A tatterdemalion is somebody wearing tattered clothing. It can also be used as an adjective meaning tattered or ragged in appearance.
• Tittle: The word "tittle" has got just one tittle in it, but this sentence has six — no, seven — more. It's the little dot above a lowercase "j" or "i."
• Pogonotrophy: You probably know someone who engages in pogonotrophy, the act of growing a beard, even if they don't call it that.
• Pilgarlic: On the opposite end of the spectrum, a pilgarlic is a bald-headed person — usually one you're mocking or feeling sorry for.
• Balter: One thing we can definitely do with confidence at the Curiosity offices is balter. It means "to dance badly."
• Pandiculation: When you get up in the morning, sit on the edge of your bed, and stretch your arms in all directions, you're actually pandiculating.
• Sciapodous: Having large feet. Simple as that.
• Natiform: Shaped like a butt. Perfect — no more relying on the peach emoji.
• Defenestrate: You've got to wonder about the kind of mind that thinks there needs to be a word for throwing someone out of a window.
• Bruxism: Do you grind your teeth at night? Tell your dentist that you suffer from bruxism.
• Phosphene: While you're pandiculating, you might also press your knuckles into your eyes until little stars appear. Those specks of light are called phosphenes.
• Cataglottism: Technically, you may already know another word for cataglottism, but it's a great way to make "french kiss" sound a lot less sexy.
• Lemniscate: A figure-8 turned on its side — in other words, the infinity symbol.
• Obelus: The division symbol (÷), which we were surprised had an actual name.
• Preantepenultimate: "Ultimate" is last, "penultimate" is second-to-last, "antepenultimate" is third-to-last, which makes this the preantepenultimate word on this list.
• Griffonage: You might call sloppy handwriting "chicken scratch," but "griffonage" rolls off the tongue much more easily.
• Archimime: Frankly, we didn't think that this word would mean exactly what it sounds like, but it does. The archimime is the chief buffoon or jester. The boss clown, in other words.
• Tyrotoxism: Scratch what we said about "defenestrate" earlier — the fact that somebody came up with a word for "to poison with cheese" is much more unbelievable.
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