List of unusual English words
For the purposes of this article, any word which has appeared in a recognised general English dictionary published in the 20th century or later is considered a candidate.
Most people are aware that the letter y can serve as both a consonant and a vowel. However, cwm (pronounced "koom", defined as a steep-walled hollow on a hillside) is a rare case of a word using w as a vowel, as is crwth (pronounced "krooth", a type of stringed instrument). Both words are in MWCD. They derive from the Welsh use of w as a vowel. The word cwm is commonly applied to Welsh place names; cwms of glacial origin are a common feature of Welsh geography. It is also used to describe features in the Himalaya.
Arguably, however, both these examples may belong in 'Words of Foreign Origin', as they are actual words in the Welsh language which have been absorbed into English. See 'coombe' as the south-west English equivalent of 'cwm'.
Uncopyrightable, with fifteen letters, is the longest common word in English in which no letter is used more than once. Dermatoglyphics shares the distinction but is a less well-known word.
There is only one common word in English that has five vowel letters in a row: "queueing" (2 vowel sounds).
The place-name Knightsbridge has six consonant letters in a row (with four consonant sounds), as does the word latchstring.
There are several words that feature all five vowels in alphabetical order, including "abstemious", "abstentious", "arsenious", "caesious" and "facetious". If one insists on counting y as a vowel then ly can be added to the first two and the last.
The word "strengths" is the longest word with one vowel if you count "y" as a vowel. Otherwise, longer words with only one vowel include "psychorrhythms" (14), "polyrhythms" (11) and "rhythmless" (10).
"Bookkeeper" has three consecutive doubled letters.
"Hungry", "angry", and "aggry" (a kind of beads from western Africa) all end in "-gry".
"Aa", a type of lava, consists entirely of a doubled "a".Strange spellings
Combinations of letters
| Pron | X-SAMPA | Example | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| "UFF" | [Vf] | tough, enough | |
| "OFF" | [Qf] or [Of] | cough, trough | |
| "OW" | [aU] | bough, slough | Slough is pronounced as 'slew' in American English, and also in British English for some meanings |
| "OH" | [@U] | though, dough | |
| "OR" | [O:t] | thought | |
| "AW" | thought | Pronounced as in 'awe' in American English | |
| "OO" | [u:] | through | |
| "UH" | [@] | thorough, borough | Both pronouced as 'OH' in American English |
| "UP" | [Vp] | hiccough | Variant spelling of "hiccup", though the latter form is recommended in both British and US |
| "UFF" | [Uf] | wough | Compare "wuff" |
| "UKH" | [ux] | sough | In Scotish English; otherwise pronounced 'UFF' or 'OW' |
| "OHKH" | [@Ux] | jough, turlough | Manx and Irish respectively |
| "OCK" | [Ok] | hough | More commonly spelled "hock" in the 20th Century onwards |
| "OKH" | [Qx] | lough | A lake; Irish analogue of Scottish "loch" |
The original pronunciation in all cases was the last one. However the kh sound has disappeared from most modern English dialects. As it faded, different speakers replaced it by different near equivalents in different words. Thus the present confusion resulted.
The "ough"s in the English place name Loughborough are pronounced differently to each other, resulting in Luffburruh.
Tough, though, through, and thorough are all formed by adding an additional letter each time, yet none of them rhyme with each other.
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious - although some might argue that this word does not formally belong to English language, it definitely belongs to English culture today. It was popularized by a song from Walt Disney's movie Mary Poppins, 1964. It is not used the original book by Pamela Travers. The origins are unclear, but claimed to significantly predate the movie (which was also a base for a copyright infringement lawsuit against the song publishers). See the Supercali... external link.
There are other longwords known, such as antidisestablishmentarianism, listed in the Oxford English Dictionary, which held the #1 place for quite a long time. Today books for curious kids mention " pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" to be The Number One. However chemical nomenclature of organic compounds may easily beat any present or future record. The word trichloroethyleneglycerophosphate gives the idea. One may easily concoct a name of thousands letters in this way, see the What does antidisestablishmentarianism mean? external link.
Main article: Foreign language influences in English.
The entire history of English involves influence and loanwords from other languages, and this process continues today. However, there is a gray area between foreign words and words accepted as English. Everyone would accept that the formerly foreign "ballet" (French), "ketchup" (Malay) and "safari" (Swahili) are now English words. The status of words such as zeitgeist, Weltanschauung, and schadenfreude is less clear-cut. The Oxford English Dictionary calls such words "resident aliens".Longwords
Main article: Longest word in English.Words of foreign origin