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What new words have you learned from books lately?


That's funny, because I've seen caravanserai in several fantasy books as well. I think the first time I thought it was made up by that author until I read another book that had it. It definitely has a fantasy feel to it.


Alterity, meaning otherness (the other of two), was a word used quite bit in City & City. It was new for me.
And now that I saw it in C&C, I see it elsewhere. So I guess I have always seen it, but it took reading C&C, which has otherness everywhere, to pop out at me.
I love that TC&tC is the book that made so many of us see words we can't unsee now! So thematic!
For me it was perspicacious: having a ready insight into and understanding of things.
For me it was perspicacious: having a ready insight into and understanding of things.

catabasis, apocatastasis, connectome, gnomon
And then the word Fugue I remember has a few different meanings and he kept using it in all the ways.
And I’ve never seen the first four anywhere else. Actually I might have seen gnomon somewhere recently but I can’t remember where.
But Mieville is good for using uncommon words too.
I’m always thrilled to see a new word though. It usually sheds light on other words or Latin roots.

This is my first Mieville book, and he definitely has a large vocabulary and uses it well. Just spotted Lugubrious which is one I've heard but don't see often.



Happened upon it in Kim Stanley Robinson's 2312. What it describes is very much the 'optimal state of being', imho, but I had never heard of the term before. A nice discovery.

I’m reading A Stitch in Time by Penelope Lively to my son (it’s supposed to be a time travel book, but we are 70% in and there has yet to be any real time travel. She does talk to animals and in animate objects though...Anyway) and she is not afraid to use “big” words in a kids book. It’s great! And super easy to just look up since we’re using Libby.


crepuscular = resembling or relating to twilight
juddering = shuddering / vibrating
derecho = storm that moves a long distance rapidly (straight line winds)
clarted = sticky mud/filth
kerf = a slit made by a saw or the cut end of a felled tree
bahookie = Scottish term for a person's buttocks
myrmidon = follower or subordinate to a powerful person

I read a lot of Scots and Irish mysteries (gritty type ones) where they have scads of words I need to look up

I read a lot of Scots and Irish mysteries (gritty type ones) where they have scads of wor..."
Same:)

Indeed. I need Kindle (with its dictionary) when I am reading his books. I won't survive a Mieville audiobook....


That's very useful! You could actually use both in daily life.



Every time I see this word I have to remind myself that it's not from Dickens (who did names so well that many have entered our language as words), but from a play before his time.
Thoughtco explains: "The character Mrs. Malaprop is a humorous aunt who gets mixed up in the schemes and dreams of young lovers in Richard Brinsley Sheridan's 1775 comedy-of-manners The Rivals. One of the funniest aspects of Mrs. Malaprop's character is that she often uses an incorrect word to express herself."
Maybe I should read The Rivals....

I'd no idea that this was from the theater. I may have to read that ploy as well.

Sort of a new word, but more a surprising spelling.
In Elatsoe there is the line:
They kicked the wood, and Ronnie even whaled against it with a pair of silver skates.
I did a double-take, thinking that surely it must be "wailed." In my mind, the concept "to beat at" was linked emotionally to the meaning of "to cry out."
But no, it apparently comes from "to lash and stripe with wales" (related to "weal"). Looking at the etymology, I also learned that the "wale" of fabric ridges like in corduroy is linked to the wale planks of a boat, like "gunwale."
(As a desert rat, I have a little running joke with myself that half the new words I learn are nautically related, and so in finding the nautical connection I triumphantly proclaim, "Ya-har! *brandishes


Hah! Thank you for that imagery as well. As a former desert rat (and perhaps still one in my heart) who is now in a maritime location I feel like I live this every day. Today is the start of the town's annual epic salt water endurance/adventure race and the mass start is another opportunity to learn more words (some of them very colorful).

Kindles have a system where they add words you look up to a vocabulary list. Here are some of my recent ones:
teratological; the study of congenital abnormalities and abnormal formations from Reanimators by Pete Rawlik
spalling; break (ore, rock or stone) into smaller pieces in preparation for sorting from Live Free or Die by John Ringo (terrible book)
avulsed: the action of pulling away from Spin by Patricia Cornwell
galluses: braces for a person's trousers from Old Nathan by David Drake. I originally thought this was a misspelling of galoshes, then braces through me as Americans call them suspenders...

Funny. I just thought to myself "Yeah. For foreign languages." Completely excluding English from that thinking ^^'
What my brain meant to say was: I do occasionally write down Japanese words. The only one I've ever taken any measures studying consistently by myself. But it's been a while since I've regularly kept up with it, either.
Though, incidentally, I did just yesterday: trying to parse the Japanese blurb of Desolation Road, jotted down the words pen on paper (none of you judge: I'm proud of the 'authenticity' of my hasty hand writing transcending writing systems *ha*).
(Also in this notebook: me trying to match Finnish and Inari Saami conjugations to make sense of them (if there's a primary language to learn Saami by, it ought to be one which can easily match the nuance of the conjugations), trying out Amharic syllabaries (prompted by running into Amharic twitter conversation), and practicing Arabic alphabets. And some lazy Cyrillic scribbles (it's a bit of an embarrassment to be rubbish with Cyrillic, given how it's often one of the locally featured ones).)
But these are quite random and occasional, for when ever mood strikes; nothing systematic or regularly practiced. At the moment.
As for learning words from reading: I honestly *just* looked up a word (English) from a read, but seem to have already forgotten what it was. So, perhaps a system would come handy.
Then again. If something features often enough, one ought to pick it up... one justifies *ha*

As a kid I read with a dictionary and a notebook, and kept a physical record of new and interesting words.
Now, I have a bookmarks folder of just "Words" and add my dictionary / etymology / image search results to that. I don't go out of my way to practice them, but when I scroll through I may click on a word to refresh my memory, and when I see that a previously new word is now familiar, then I delete it from the list.

That is a neat feature.

I was worried that I was the only one this happened to. Also you do seem to have stumbled unto a system with the cool japanese writing and notebook with matching conjugations et al.

ETA: you can turn them into Flash Cards too.

Aah! I envy your organized activeness*.
(* Shorted out for a bit there; had to actually think for the word for a second: 'activism', that's certainly not correct. 'Activity' neither...)

Oh, and this just got added to a very specific place in my head near an oft repeated word I like to keep an eye/ear out for. I shall now know, if I'm ever about to mistake this for it!
(Its 'calluses').

All I do is press on a word to look up the definition and it's automatically added. Of course, I do get words added when I fall asleep with my finger on the screen, so I do have to clean the list out from time to time...

Caravanserai comes from the middle east (I think) and was a place where the trade caravans (usually of camels I suspect) gathered and traded their goods. There is one in Kusadasi, in Turkey, in the old part of the town, and I suspect you will find them, or at least the remains in other eastern places.
In Kusadasi it's a walled area which you enter through a narrow gate. The walls are high and there's a covered area all around, so it's shaded and cool. In this one there are trees planted, too.

Writers are often told not to use unfamiliar words. To me this is dumbing down, and insulting to the reader. Many years ago, a much loved children's author was heavily criticized for using too simple vocabulary and not extending children's knowledge of words. Now writers are told to use simple vocabulary!
The problem is that mNy wonderful and descriptive words will disappear from the language, which is a pity.


An excellent series. And you weren't put off by having to use a dictionary, which advisers tell writers you would be.


Apologies. I didn't think that was a writerly thing, just a comment.


I just learned a new word RELATED to things we do with books:
retronym
It's when you now have NEW things that use the same old word and you have to find a new word for the original thing. So like how we have dead tree books, ebooks and audiobooks. They're all books, so we need a new word for what used to be a book, which is to say a physical book made of paper
retronym
It's when you now have NEW things that use the same old word and you have to find a new word for the original thing. So like how we have dead tree books, ebooks and audiobooks. They're all books, so we need a new word for what used to be a book, which is to say a physical book made of paper
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Kindle has been a huge help in this, because I can just highlight a word and the definition pops up. Whereas before, I would ask a friend, family member or teacher if I thought of it, now I get instant knowledge.
I am currently reading The City & The City, and it has so far given me a few new words that I didn't know the meaning of. It still amazes me how I've been speaking English my whole life and still come across new words and concepts.
The most recent word I learned was "tendentious" which means expressing or intending to promote a particular cause or point of view, especially a controversial one.
So I was just curious if anyone had any new or unique words they have learned from a book recently. Feel free to share and discuss.