Reading and writing is a very powerful tool to help build your language skills. With that comes a massive uptick in your vocabulary. Whether you remember them, use them, or not is a function of committing them to memory. How many of these do you know? What words have you learned from reading and writing?
| word | definition | 
|---|---|
| adubmbrate | to foreshadow vaguely | 
| armillary | Open work globe sundial combination often used as garden art | 
| besom | A broom or brush made of straws or twigs tied to a stick, as a classic witch’s broom. Also, an insult to a woman who does not ‘know her place.’ | 
| bibulous | relating to the consumption of alcohol | 
| brummagem | cheap or showy | 
| casuistic | Specious or excessively subtle reasoning intended to rationalize or mislead | 
| chaffer | To haggle or barter. Slur of “cheap fare.” | 
| chattel | an item of tangible movable or immovable property except real estate and things (such as buildings) connected with real property | 
| chicanery | Deception by trickery or sophistry | 
| cobby | Having short legs and a compact body; stocky. Used of animals | 
| coelenterate | bearing tentacles with nematocysts, like a jellyfish. An echinoderm, by the way, is basically a starfish, and a nudibranch is a sea slug | 
| Comprimario | A comprimario role is an operatic bit part. | 
| contraposto | Used in the visual arts to describe a human figure standing with most of its weight on one foot so that its shoulders and arms twist off axis from the hips and legs. | 
| copse | a small group of trees | 
| coruscate | To give forth flashes of light; sparkle and glitter: diamonds coruscating in the candlelight. | 
| deign | to do something that one considers beneath one’s dignity | 
| exsanguinate | to drain of blood | 
| Fach | a German loan word, meaning vocal type. Is the soprano a coloratura? a spinto? That type of difference is the fach. | 
| farrier | one who shoes horses | 
| fenestration | the arrangement of pattern of window openings, aka windowing | 
| graupel | Pellets of snow or ice, also called soft hail, small hail, or snow pellets, which are not translucent ice but white and opaque. (Handy where I live now!) | 
| hierophant | a person who brings congregants into the presence of the holy | 
| houri | A seductive, alluring woman. | 
| laconic | Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. | 
| limn | to depict or describe in painting or words | 
| louche | Dubious, shady, disreputable. | 
| manse | a clergy house or a large imposing residence | 
| menhir | A prehistoric monument of a class found chiefly in the British Isles and northern France, consisting of a single tall, upright megalith | 
| mordant(ly) | bitingly sarcastic | 
| palanquin | an Asian means of conveyance | 
| peal | loud ringing of a bell or bells | 
| pedantic | Excessively concerned with minor details or rules; over-scrupulous | 
| puissance | power; might | 
| Recherché | Out of the ordinary | 
| rictus | A gaping grimace: “his mouth gaping in a kind of rictus of startled alarm” (Richard Adams) | 
| roborant | restoring vigor or strength | 
| Spinto | a term for vocal heft in between lyric (light) and dramatic (heavy). | 
| tare | To set a scale for weight to read zero when a container such as a bowl or plate rests on it, resulting in only the weight of the contents of the bowl or plate being measured | 
| tesselate | to decorate a floor with mosaics | 
| Tessitura | Where the bulk of the notes in a role lie. Are most of the notes in the upper register or the lower register? That difference in tessitura determines who can sing different roles. | 
| threnody | A poem or song of mourning or lamentation. | 
| vertiginous | causing vertigo especially by being extremely high or steep | 
| vicissitude | a change in fortune, typically for the worse | 
| mafic dyke swarm | a large geological structure consisting of a major group of parallel, linear, or radially oriented dikes intruded within continental crust. They consist of several to hundreds of dikes emplaced more or less contemporaneously during a single intrusive event, and are magmatic and stratigraphic | 
| askance | with disapproval, suspicion, or distrust | 
| assuage | To make (something burdensome or painful) less intense or severe | 
| meringue | A mixture of egg whites and sugar beaten until stiff and baked until slightly brown, often used as a topping on pies | 
| Pharisee | A member of an ancient Jewish sect that emphasized strict interpretation and observance of the Mosaic law in both its oral and written form | 
| palimpsest | A manuscript, typically of papyrus or parchment, that has been written on more than once, with the earlier writing incompletely scraped off or erased and often legible | 
| Luddite | Any of a group of British workers who between 1811 and 1816 rioted and destroyed laborsaving textile machinery in the belief that such machinery would diminish employment. | 
| sesquipedalian | given to or characterized by long words, or long | 
| polysyllabic | Having more than two and usually more than three syllables. | 
| epitome | A representative or perfect example of a class or type | 
| ferrule | a metal ring or cap placed around a pole or shaft for reinforcement or to prevent splitting | 
| fleuron | a flower | 
| fungible | Returnable or negotiable in kind or by substitution, as a quantity of grain for an equal amount of the same kind of grain. | 
| finial | A sculptured ornament, often in the shape of a leaf or flower, at the top of a gable, pinnacle, or similar structure. | 
| triskelion | A figure consisting of three curved lines or branches, or three stylized human arms or legs, radiating from a common center. | 
| trefoil | Any of various plants of the pea family, chiefly of the genera Trifolium and Lotus, having compound trifoliolate leaves. | 
| caduceus | the greek symbol of commerce, thieves and tricksters: a winged staff with two intertwined snakes. Often confused with the rod of Asclepius, the symbol of medicine, which is a single snake coiled around a staff (the caduceus is often used instead of the rod of Asclepius to represent medicine in America, but this is considered incorrect elsewhere) | 
| pong | a strong, unpleasant smell, as in the pong of unwashed boy | 
| Sepulcher | a burial vault | 
| Aurochs | a large wild Eurasian ox that was the ancestor of domestic cattle | 
| Redoubt | a temporary or supplemental fortification, typically square or polygonal and without flanking defenses | 
| Sigil | an inscribed or painted sign or symbol considered to have magical powers | 
| Caparisoned | an ornamental covering spread over a horse’s saddle or harness | 
| Plinth | a heavy base supporting a statue or vase | 
| Crone | an old woman who is thin and ugly | 
| Skirl | a shrill sound, esp. that of bagpipes | 
| Tremulous | marked by trembling, quivering, or shaking | 
| roundhouse | hit with a big sweep of the hand | 
| phantasmagorical | dreamlike | 
| Reticule | a handbag or purse that closes with a drawstring | 
| Dazzle Camouflage | complex patterns of geometric shapes in contrasting colours, interrupting and intersecting each other | 
| Chthonic | of, or related to, the Underworld | 
| Quaquaversal | spreading from a single point to every direction equally, like ripples in a pond or a domed roof | 
| Xylem | the water and nutrient transport system in plants | 
| Parliament | can also mean a group of owls, aside from the more obvious meaning of a governing body | 
| Tabi | a kind of Japanese sock | 
| Pusillanimous | lacking in courage | 
| Pronking | that bounding gait peculiar to deer, antelope, and a few other animals, where they move around in a series of leaps. | 
| Automaton | A moving mechanical device made in imitation of a human being | 
| Cupule | A cup | 
| conroi | group of five to ten knights who trained and fought together in the Middle Ages. | 
| mesnie | medieval household. | 
| destrier | a medieval knight’s warhorse. | 
| braies | medieval men’s underwear. | 
| osculatrix | A curve or surface that osculates another curve or surface | 
| wayn | an archaeic term for wagon, alternative spelling for wain | 
| murder | a collection of crows | 
| privvy | toilet | 
| miffed | upset or offended | 
| numpty | incompetent or unwise | 
| spawny | lucky | 
| midden | slurry or septic tank | 
| tosh | nonsense or rubbish | 
| Mephitic | foul smelling, noxious gas. | 
| Caitiff | a cowardly or contemptible person. | 
| Trebuchet | A machine used in medieval siege warfare for hurling large stones or other missiles. | 
| Inimical | tending to obstruct or harm | 
| Querulous | complaining in a petulant or whining manner | 
| Carrack | a large merchant ship of a kind operating in European waters in the 14th to 17th century | 
| Pennon | a long triangular or swallow | 
| Basilisk | a mythical reptile with a lethal gaze or breath, hatched by a serpent from a cock’s egg | 
| Vair | fur, typically bluish | 
