While reading “The Puppet Masters” by Robert A. Heinlein I came across a tract that read as follows
In my curiosity, I looked in the dictionary to prove to myself, and anyone around that there was actually a word that long which wasn’t the name for some exotic disease. I couldn’t find it. I searched in every dictionary available to me without avail. Does anyone have a REALLY big dictionary they could look this up in. Perhaps you’ve heard this word in a conversation with someone who has an enormous vocabulary… please let me know, as I am anxious to find a word which my english teacher does not know (and that can be used in ordinary conversation).
Many thanks
-DavidBW1
ISTR that Clinton’s Press Secretary once used it in briefing the press (one assumes it was a slow news day). I know I’ve used it on the board at least once, and another time in casual conversation with friends. Both times in relation to the subject of obscure words, so it wasn’t completely out of the blue.
It was originally coined by schoolboys at Eton, although Sir Walter Scott attributed it to a letter by the poet William Shenstone. Source: 2000 Most Challenging and Obscure Words, p. 143, Norman W. Schur.
The longest real word in the Oxford English Dictionary is floccipaucinihilipilification (alternatively spelt in hyphenated form with n in seventh place) with 29 letters, meaning ‘the action of estimating as worthless’, which was first used in 1741, and later by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832).
That’s another thing Sir Walter has to answer for.
This is an actual word, but it is pretty obscure. It seems to be one of Heinlein’s pet words, as it appears in at least one more of his books, The Number of the Beast, when the main characters are intellectually sparring.
Heinlein tends to use it to describe people who are skeptical to the point of lack of belief in almost everything.