The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained
This unique reference book strives to define words and phrases that the average person often encounters but which may not be immediately familiar. Batten, kiosk, proctor, coup de grace, alliteration, parsec, corona, renal, joystick, decant, citadel. Broken down into over fifty categories—from cultural essentials likeart, history, and sports to modern obsessions like text messaging and hip hop slang—this book is a word lover's dream and a useful handbook for any student. It covers theatre. It even has a section of foreign words commonly used in English. Expand your vocabulary. Improve your writing. Broaden your horizons!
1129390761
The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained
This unique reference book strives to define words and phrases that the average person often encounters but which may not be immediately familiar. Batten, kiosk, proctor, coup de grace, alliteration, parsec, corona, renal, joystick, decant, citadel. Broken down into over fifty categories—from cultural essentials likeart, history, and sports to modern obsessions like text messaging and hip hop slang—this book is a word lover's dream and a useful handbook for any student. It covers theatre. It even has a section of foreign words commonly used in English. Expand your vocabulary. Improve your writing. Broaden your horizons!
16.99 In Stock
The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained

The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained

by Diagram Group
The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained

The Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words: Over 10,000 Common and Confusing Words Explained

by Diagram Group

Paperback

$16.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 6-10 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

This unique reference book strives to define words and phrases that the average person often encounters but which may not be immediately familiar. Batten, kiosk, proctor, coup de grace, alliteration, parsec, corona, renal, joystick, decant, citadel. Broken down into over fifty categories—from cultural essentials likeart, history, and sports to modern obsessions like text messaging and hip hop slang—this book is a word lover's dream and a useful handbook for any student. It covers theatre. It even has a section of foreign words commonly used in English. Expand your vocabulary. Improve your writing. Broaden your horizons!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781602393394
Publisher: Skyhorse
Publication date: 10/17/2008
Pages: 528
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Language

grammar and linguistics

ablative A grammatical noun case that indicates movement away or a cause of something.

ablaut A change in the vowel in different forms of a verb, such as tenses, for example "hang" and "hung."

accidence The part of grammar that deals with inflections of words.

accusative A grammatical noun case that indicates a direct object of a verb or preposition.

acronym A word made up of initials or parts of other words, for example, NATO.

active Used to describe a form of verb in which the grammatical subject performs the action, for example, "The government took steps." Comparepassive.

acute accent A mark (') placed above a vowel in some languages to indicate pronunciation or stress.

adjective A word that modifies or describes a noun, for example, "green" or "happy."

adverb A word that modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb, for example, "brightly."

affix A word element that only occurs as an attachment to another word or part of a word, such as a prefix or suffix.

agential Used to describe a case of nouns that identify the person peforming the action of a verb, for example, "singer."

amelioration A process by which the meaning of a word changes to something more favorable.

ampersand A character (&) used in printing and writing to represent "and."

antonym A word that means the opposite of a given word.

aorist A simple past tense, especially in ancient Greek, that does not imply continuance or momentariness.

apostrophe A punctuation mark (') used to show that a letter has been omitted or to indicate possession, such as in "David's house."

apposition A grammatical construction in which one noun or noun phrase explains another immediately next to it, for example, in "Picasso, the painter."

argot A special language used only among members of a particular group.

article A word used to identify the noun that it precedes.

aspect A form of a verb that relates it to the passage of time, such as repetition, beginning, or duration.

attributive A word or group of words that modifies a noun to which it is immediately adjacent.

auxiliary verb A verb that accompanies and augments the meaning of a main verb, for example, "can" in "can do."

back-formation The formation of a word by assuming it must be the root of an existing word, for example the verb "babysit" derived from the noun "babysitter."

barbarism An expression or use of words that is considered unacceptable or incorrect.

brackets A pair of punctuation marks, [ ], used to enclose words added to a text. Compareparentheses.

buzzword A word used in a particular jargon that gains a wider, fashionable, currency.

calqueSeeloan translation.

cant A specialized vocabulary used among a particular group of people.

case The relationship that a word has to the other words in a sentence, often shown by the form the word takes.

cedilla A mark placed under a letter "c" in French to show that it is pronounced as "s," for example, "façade."

circumflex A mark (^) placed over a vowel in some languages, such as French, to show a change in pronunciation.

clause A group of words that forms part of a sentence, usually containing a subject and a predicate.

coinage A new word or expression.

colloquial Used to describe words or expressions that are found in everyday speech.

colon A punctuation mark (:) that introduces another phrase such as a quotation or a list.

comma A punctuation mark (,) used to separate items in a list or indicate a brief pause.

comparative Used to describe an adjective or adverb comparing two things, for example, "brighter" or "more brightly."

complement A word or group of words that follows a verb and completes a predicate.

compound A word formed from two or more other words or word parts.

conjugation A verb inflection or a complete set of the inflections of a verb.

conjunction A word used to connect other words, phrases, or sentences, for example, "but."

consonant A speech sound or letter representing one that is not a vowel and is pronounced by constriction, for example, "t."

copula A verb that identifies or links the subject with the predicate in a sentence, for example, "looks" in "She looks very happy today."

copulative Used to describe a verb that acts as a copula.

dangling participle A participle that is not correctly related to the word it is supposed to modify, for example "flying" in "Flying home that night, the weather broke."

dash A punctuation mark like a long hyphen, used, for example, to indicate a change of the subject or introduce a further statement.

dative A noun case that indicates the indirect object of a verb.

declension An inflection or set of inflections for a noun, pronoun, or adjective.

deep structure A term used in linguistics to mean the underlying structure of relationships between the elements that make up a sentence.

definite article An article that specifies a noun; in English "the" is the definite article.

demonstrative pronoun A pronoun that specifies a particular person or thing, such as "this, that, or those."

descriptive linguistics The study of a language at a particular stage in its development without relating it to other stages or other languages.

desiderative Used to describe a sentence, clause, or verb form that expresses a desire.

deteriorationSeepejoration.

determiner A word that qualifies a noun or noun phrase, for example "my."

diachronic Used to describe the study of the development of a language over time.

diacritic A mark attached to a letter to show a modification of sound or stress.

dialect A form of a language used in a particular region or by a particular group of people.

diction A person's choice and use of words and expressions in speaking or writing.

dieresis A punctuation mark (¿) placed over a vowel to show that it is pronounced (as in Brontë) or is pronounced separately (as in naïve).

diphthong A speech sound that, within one syllable, changes from one vowel sound to another.

disjunctive Used to describe a word that indicates opposition or contrast.

elevation Another word for amelioration.

ellipsis A punctuation mark consisting of a series of periods ( ...) used to show that something has been omitted.

elliptical clause A clause in which something is omitted, usually because it is understood. In the sentence "If in doubt, check the manual." "If in doubt" is an elliptical clause, with words such as "you are" omitted.

eponym A person's name from which the name of a place or thing is derived.

ergative Used to describe a case of verbs that take the same noun as either subject or object, for example "broke" in "She broke the glass" and "The glass broke."

etymologist A person who studies the origins of words.

etymon A form of a word from which another word has been derived.

exclamation point A punctuation mark (!) used to show that something is being exclaimed. Also called exclamation mark.

finite verb A verb that is inflected in some way, such as to indicate person, tense, or number.

frequentative Used to describe verbs that express an action that is repeated.

genitive A noun case that indicates possession, measurement, or source.

gerund A verb form that ends in "-ing" and can be used as a noun, for example, "swimming."

glossary An alphabetical list of specialized words and phrases, given their explanations.

gradation Another word for ablaut.

grammar The way in which elements of a language are put together to make sentences, or the study of the structure of a language.

grave A mark (') placed above a vowel in some languages to indicate pronunciation or stress; used in English poetry to show that a final syllable–ed is pronounced, as in "slakèd."

historical linguistics The study of the changes in a language over a period of time.

homograph A word with the same spelling as another word but a different meaning.

homonym A word with the same sound (and sometimes the same spelling) as another word but with a different meaning.

homophone A word with the same sound as another word but with a different meaning and spelling.

hybrid A word made up of elements from different languages, for example, "television" from "tele" (Greek, meaning "far") and "visio" (Latin, meaning "see").

hyphen A punctuation mark (-) used to link parts of a compound term or show that a word at the end of a line continues on the next line.

idiolect The variety of a language that is used by an individual.

idiom A group of words with a meaning that cannot be deduced from its constituent parts, such as "at the end of my tether;" also used to mean the vocabulary of a particular group.

idiomatic Used to describe use of language that is natural to native speakers or employing many idioms.

imperative A form of a verb or a construction that is used to express a command.

imperfect Used to describe a verb form that expresses an uncompleted or ongoing action, as in "We were walking."

imperfective aspect An aspect of verbs that expresses action without reference to its completion or beginning.

inchoative Used to describe a verb form that expresses a beginning.

indefinite article An article such as "a" or "an" that does not specify the noun that it modifies.

indicative A form of a verb that is used mainly to make statements.

infinitive The basic uninflected form of a verb, usually accompanied by "to" as in "to be."

inflection A change in the form of a word that indicates a different tense or number.

instrumental Used to describe a case of nouns that indicate the means by which something is done.

interjection A part of speech or expression that can make sense when uttered alone, for example, "Hello."

interrogation pointSeequestion mark.

interrogative A form of a verb or a construction that is used to express a question.

intransitive Used to describe a verb that does not have a direct object. Comparetransitive.

iterative Another word for frequentative.

jargon A language that is special to a profession, culture, or subject, often technical, and is not easily understood by outsiders; also used to mean any apparently nonsensical language.

langue Any language considered in the abstract as belonging to a community.

lexeme A fundamental meaningful unit of a language.

lexical Relating to the vocabulary of a language.

lexicographer A person who compiles or writes dictionaries.

lexicography The art or practice of compiling or writing dictionaries.

lexicology The study of the history and structure of the vocabulary of a language.

lexicon A dictionary or glossary.

lexis The total set of words used in a language.

lingua franca A language used for communication between speakers of different languages, often containing elements of several languages.

linguistics The study of the structure and uses of language.

loan translation A word or phrase created in a language by translating a word or phrase in another language, for example "superman" from the German "übermensch."

loan word A word that has been borrowed from one language and become naturalized in another language.

localism A word or expression that is only used in a particular place.

locative Used to describe a case of nouns that indicate the place where something is done.

locution An individual word, phrase, or expression, or a particular person's way of speaking.

modifier A word, clause, or phrase that in some way qualifies or limits another word or group of words, for example "army" in "an army vehicle."

monosyllable A word with only one syllable.

mood A category of a verb indicating a semantic or grammatical difference.

morpheme A word or part of a word that cannot be further divided into smaller elements.

morphology The structure and form of words, especially the different forms such as inflections that can be classified.

neologism A word or expression that is newly created.

nominative A grammatical noun case that indicates the subject of a verb.

nonce word A word invented by someone for a specific occasion, not likely to become established in the language.

noun A word that gives a name to a thing or person and can be the subject or object of a verb.

object The part of a sentence that denotes the person or thing affected by the action, usually a noun or substantive.

objective A grammatical noun case that indicates the object of a verb.

oblique Used to describe any case of nouns other than the nominative or vocative.

onomastics The study of the history, forms, and origins of proper nouns.

paragraph A distinct part of a text, usually marked by beginning on a new, indented, line.

parentheses A pair of punctuation marks, ( ), used to enclose explanatory or qualifying words. Comparebrackets.

parlance A particular way of speaking, or the specialized idiom of a particular group of people.

parole A term used to mean a language as it is actually spoken by individual speakers.

paronym A word that shares the same derivation as another word.

parse To analyze a sentence by breaking it down into its constituent parts and explaining the function of each and their relationships.

participle A form of a verb that can also function as an adjective, such as "cooked" or "pressing."

particle A short uninflected word used in conjunction with another word, such as "up" in "turn up."

passive Used to describe a form of verb in which the grammatical subject is the object of the action, for example, the sentence "The government took steps." in the passive would be "Steps were taken by the government." Compareactive.

past participle A verb form that expresses a completed action, such as "tasted."

patois A regional dialect, or a jargon belonging to a particular group of people.

pejoration A process by which the meaning of a word changes to something less favorable.

pejorative Used to describe an expression that means something unpleasant or derogatory.

perfective aspect An aspect of verbs that expresses completed action.

perfect participle Another word for past participle.

period A punctuation mark (.) that shows the end of a sentence or follows an abbreviation.

phoneme Any of the speech sounds in a language that convey a difference in meaning.

phonetics The sounds used in speech, or the scientific study of these.

phrasal verb A verb made up of a verb plus one or more particles, for example "clean up."

phrase A group of words forming a unit that is not a complete sentence.

pluperfect Used to describe a verb form that expresses an action, that has been completed before the time of speaking, as in "We had walked."

polysyllable A word that contains many syllables.

portmanteau word A word formed by combining the sounds and meanings of two other words.

possessive A case of nouns or pronouns that expresses ownership, often shown by an apostrophe followed by "s" as in "Jane's car."

predicate The part of a sentence that asserts or denies something, often containing a verb and the object of the sentence.

prefix A word or word part that is added to the beginning of another word, such as "dis-" in "dislike."

preposition A word used before a noun or pronoun to mark its relation to the rest of the sentence, such as "to" in "I went to the beach."

present Used to describe a verb form that expresses a current action, as in "We walk."

present participle A verb form that expresses current action, such as "speaking."

preterit A form of a verb that expresses a completed action, for example, "We slept."

progressive Used to describe a verb form that expresses an action that is prolonged or continuous, as in "We are walking."

pronoun A word used in the place of a noun to avoid it having to be named twice, such as "it" in "She called the dog and it came to her."

proper noun A noun that is the name of a person, thing, place, or event, such as "Anna" or "France."

question mark A punctuation mark used to show that something is being asked.

reflexive A form of a verb in which the subject and the object are the same, for example, "He washed himself."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Dictionary Of Unfamiliar Words"
by .
Copyright © 2008 Diagram Visual Information Limited.
Excerpted by permission of Skyhorse Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Cover,
Title Page,
Copyright Page,
Foreword,
Word Finder,
1 - Language,
grammar and linguistics,
figures of speech and rhetoric,
idiomatic expressions,
Foreign terms used in English,
English words and American equivalents,
fields of study or practice,
enthusiasts,
2 - The Arts,
literature,
theater and drama,
cinema,
dance,
music,
arts terms and techniques,
arts styles and movements,
decorative arts,
furniture and furnishings,
architecture,
fashion and clothing,
3 - History,
history terms,
4 - Society,
economics and finance,
education,
law,
politics,
philosophy,
psychology,
religions,
sociology,
social sciences,
archaeology,
the zodiac,
fortune telling,
paranormal,
magic,
5 - Physical world,
geography,
geology,
meteorology,
6 - The Sciences,
astronomy,
biology,
environmental issues,
chemistry,
physics,
mathematics,
physiology: the human body,
physiology: disorders of the body,
medicine,
medicine: surgical procedures,
medicine: alternative healing,
7 - Technology,
communications,
computing,
8 - Sports & Leisure isure,
sports,
cookery,
gardening,
Notes,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews