Lesser-known Words for everyday things

English words used in daily life conversation

Every day we point out or refer to a lot of things that we don’t really know what they should be called.

Here are some lesser-known words for everyday things.

Aglet: The plastic or metallic coating at the end of your shoelaces.

Agraffe: The cage that holds the cork in a bottle of champagne.

Armscye: The armholes in clothes, where the sleeves are sewn.

Aspergillum: An implement used for sprinkling holy water in religious ceremonies.

Blatherskite: A person who talks at great length without making much sense.

Brannock Device: The metallic device used to measure your feet at the shoe store.

Cantillate: To chant or intone a passage of religious text.

Chad: A piece of waste paper produced by punching a hole.

Columella Nasi: The space between your nostrils.

Crapulence: That utterly sick feeling you get after eating or drinking too much.

Dysania: The condition of finding it difficult to get out of the bed in the morning.

Glabella: The space between your eyebrows.

Griffonage: Unreadable handwriting.

Interrobang: When you combine an exclamation mark with a question mark (?!).

Inunct: To apply ointment to someone or something. 

Lactarium: A dairy.

Minimus: Your tiny toe or finger.

Overmorrow: The day after tomorrow.

Petrichor: The way it smells after the rain

Phosphenes: The sheen or light that you see when you close your eyes and press your hands on them.

Sternutator: Something that causes sneezing.

Tines: The prongs on a fork.

Tittle: The dot over an “i” or a “j”.

Vocables: The ‘na na na’ and ‘la la la’ which don’t really have any meaning in the lyrics of any song.

Vagitus: The cry of a newborn baby.

Wamble: The rumbling of the stomach

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