Ablissian

Your gateway to strange & new words!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Besott

Besott: verb to make someone stupid or muddled



Now for the theme this week: Being a drunkard.

Another word that has been lost in Modern English is besott. It comes from the Old English word sott, which meant a habitual drunkard. This sounds like an incredible insult for others. Instead of trying calling someone stupid, you can instead say that their parents must have besotted them. It will only prove your point when someone does not understand the word besott.

Doch

Doch: conj. However, adv. still, conj. yet


Now for a word that will give the opposite of joy: doch.

One of my favorite words from any language I've studied is doch. It purely means the opposite of whatever question is being asked. In German, it is often thought to be used as a very teenage word choice, but it also has something that English does not have: a clear, positive answer to a negative question. One example: “Did you not do your laundry today?” “Doch (Of course I did my laundry).” In normal English, if you answer, “Yes,” then the asker has no idea if the answer is, “Yes, I did the laundry ,” or “Yes, I didn't do the laundry.” So while this teenage word may seem not very important, it serves a necessary place in language.