You can also wax Roth, as pointed out by Groucho Marx.
Miss Hoover. Not Edna.
That makes me think of “nape of the neck.” Isn’t “nape” by definition the back of the neck?
I think we really shouldn’t be considering words that are defined to be specific to a particular object.
Neap isn’t always followed by tide, but when it’s used by itself it is an exact synonym for neap tide. It’s just the definition of the word. Similarly for nape. Nape is DEFINED to be the back of someone’s neck, so it should be no surprise it always shows up that way. In fact, saying “Nape of the neck” is redundant since nothing else even has a nape.
So I agree that these aren’t fossil words at all.
Unless it’s a scruff.
Shirt collars have napes. Some haircuts are defined by the length of their napes.
The word “eke” is almost exclusively used in relation to “out a living” although rarely I’ve heard it with “out a win” in terms of a narrow victory.
Just realized that this example was listed in the Wiki article… *sigh.
How about “aforethought”? Never heard that word without “malice” preceding it.