Table of Contents
- How many definitions are there in a dictionary?
- Do all dictionaries have the same words?
- Is the dictionary always correct?
- What words are not in a dictionary?
- Is Ain’t a real word?
- What does Y8 mean?
- Is YEET in the dictionary?
- Is Ain’t an American word?
- How did ain’t become a word?
- Is Ain’t correct grammar?
- What do you mean by BAE?
- Is Stupidness a correct English?
- What does stupidity mean?
- What does silliness mean?
- What is the word Stupidness?
- What is another word for human stupidity?
- What is another word for Stupidness?
- What is another word for foolishness?
- What is a slang name for a foolish person?
- What is a word for lacking common sense?
- What is a foolish person?
- What are 5 types of fools?
- How do you identify a foolish person?
- Is foolishness a sin?
- What is foolishness to God?
- What does the Bible say about a foolish person?
- What does the Bible say about foolish talk?
Even the Americans are at it! Merriam-Webster, possibly America’s most famous online dictionary, in recent years removed the following: frutescent, hodad, nephoscope, Ostmark, snollygoster, sternforemost, stylopodium, tattletale gray, and vitamin G (more commonly known today as riboflavin).
How many definitions are there in a dictionary?
Launched in 2001. As of 2013, it contained over 180,000 unique words and 576,000 definitions. Oxford Dictionary has 273,000 headwords; 171,476 of them being in current use, 47,156 being obsolete words and around 9,500 derivative words included as subentries.
Do all dictionaries have the same words?
Dictionaries do not contain all the words Perhaps because they tend to be rather large books there is frequently an assumption that most dictionaries contain all the words in the language. There has never been, and never will be, a dictionary that includes all the words in English.
Is the dictionary always correct?
The dictionary is almost always right. The dictionary writers (“lexicographers”) have a lot of goals at the same time.
Here are 20 of our favorite “missing words” and the free-range definitions we’ve found for them.
- aeroir.
- agalmics.
- agender.
- anachronym.
- bettabilitarianism.
- biketender.
- champing.
- dronie.
Is Ain’t a real word?
The word ‘ain’t’ is a contraction for am not, is not, are not, has not, and have not in the common English language vernacular. Ain’t is commonly used by many speakers in oral and informal settings, especially in certain regions and dialects.
What does Y8 mean?
Options. Rating. Y8. Y8 is short for yeet, which is expressing excitement.
Is YEET in the dictionary?
An Urban Dictionary entry from 2008 defined yeet as an excited exclamation, particularly in sports and sexual contexts. It doesn’t sound too dissimilar, after all, from exclamations like Yes! or Aight! The term spreads as a dance in black social media culture in February 2014.
Is Ain’t an American word?
Although widely disapproved as nonstandard, and more common in the habitual speech of the less educated, ain’t is flourishing in American English. It is used in both speech and writing to catch attention and to gain emphasis.
How did ain’t become a word?
Ain’t apparently begins as amn’t, a contraction for am not, which you can still hear in Ireland and Scotland today. Ain’t is recorded in the early 1700s, with amn’t found a century before. Ain’t is also influenced by aren’t, the contraction for are not recorded in the late 1600s.
Is Ain’t correct grammar?
The word ain’t is considered by many to be incorrect or “bad” English but it is common in the very informal speech of some people. It can be used to mean am not, are not, is not, have not, and has not.
What do you mean by BAE?
The short answer: Though this word was used in the 1500s to refer to sheep sounds, today bae is used as a term of endearment, often referring to your boyfriend or girlfriend. Others argue that bae is simply a shortened version of babe, which would similarly account for the rare ae juxtapostion.
Is Stupidness a correct English?
A stupid or foolish person.
What does stupidity mean?
1 : the quality or state of being stupid. 2 : a stupid idea or act. Synonyms & Antonyms Example Sentences Learn More About stupidity.
What does silliness mean?
/ˈsɪl.i.nəs/ silly behavior. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Stupid and silly behavior.
What is the word Stupidness?
Synonyms & Antonyms of stupidness the quality or state of lacking intelligence or quickness of mind. I’m not sure if he leaves his front door unlocked from carelessness or just plain stupidness.
What is another word for human stupidity?
What is another word for stupidity?
brainlessness | denseness |
---|---|
bêtise | insanity |
zaniness | wackiness |
lunacy | nonsensicalness |
preposterousness | madness |
What is another word for Stupidness?
What is another word for stupidness?
foolishness | fatuity |
---|---|
lack of understanding | nonsensicalness |
lunacy | madness |
insanity | wackiness |
preposterousness | zaniness |
What is another word for foolishness?
1 stupid, witless, brainless, senseless, unintelligent; ridiculous, absurd, nonsensical, preposterous. 1, 2 imprudent, thoughtless, 2 impetuous, rash, reckless, foolhardy, half-baked, heedless, incautious.
What is a slang name for a foolish person?
Slang name for a foolish person. DINGBAT.
What is a word for lacking common sense?
A simpleton is an idiot — a person without much common sense or intelligence.
What is a foolish person?
Foolish people are silly or senseless, and when you do something foolish, it’s clearly unwise or irrational. Foolish is a 14th century word that comes from fool, a person who’s unwise. The Latin root, follis, means “bellows” or “leather bag.” The “silly person” meaning comes from the figurative idea of a “windbag.”
What are 5 types of fools?
The five different types of fools are the naïve, the stubborn, the sensual (selfish), the scorner (cynical), and the steadfast (downright mean.) We are all fools in one way or another. Thankfully, God gives counsel to each type of fool in the Bible.
How do you identify a foolish person?
Foolish people are self-involved, overly optimistic regarding their own views, and unable to see their own vulnerabilities. They assume they already know all that needs to be known. Foolish individuals are apathetic—indifferent to outgroups, ethical concerns, and the common good. They are unimaginative and dogmatic.
Is foolishness a sin?
Objection 3: Every sin is opposed to a divine precept. But foolishness is not opposed to any precept. Therefore, foolishness is not a sin. But contrary to this: Proverbs 1:32 says, “The prosperity of fools will destroy them.” But no one is destroyed except by sin.
What is foolishness to God?
For the foolishness of God is wiser than man’s wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man’s strength. Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong.
What does the Bible say about a foolish person?
A wise man fears the LORD and shuns evil, but a fool is hotheaded and reckless. A quick-tempered man does foolish things, and a crafty man is hated. The simple inherit folly, but the prudent are crowned with knowledge.
What does the Bible say about foolish talk?
Ephesians 5:4, ESV: “Let there be no filthiness nor foolish talk nor crude joking, which are out of place, but instead let there be thanksgiving.”
Kerry U. asks: When words fall out of usage are they removed from the dictionary?
The Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is generally regarded as the single most comprehensive record of the English language to exist. Included in this work are many thousands of words considered completely “obsolete” by lexicographers. You see, in something of a Hotel California of linguistics, once a word has made it into the OED, it can never leave. Whether other dictionaries remove words or not varies from dictionary to dictionary, but major dictionaries who attempt to put out “complete” editions tend to follow suit in never removing words once they make it in. However, the much more common concise editions of all dictionaries do occasionally remove not just obsolete words, but sometimes quite common ones that simply don’t fit and are deemed less important to include than other words for various reasons.
Before we get to how a word becomes obsolete in the eyes of dictionary creators, it’s helpful to understand how a word enters the dictionary in the first place and what it means for a word to be there, with the latter being something of a common misconception.
While it’s very common for people to say something like, “It’s not in the dictionary, so it’s not a word”, this sentiment is rarely, if ever, shared by professional word-nerds. One does not have to look hard to find editors at all of the major dictionaries specifically denouncing this popular notion. As co-founder of the phenomenal word reference site Wordnik and one time chief editor of American Dictionaries at Oxford University Press, including editing the second edition of The New Oxford American Dictionary, Erin McKean, notes,
All words (aside from unintentional errors and malapropisms) are words at their birth. All you have to decide is whether the word in question is the right one for the job. Dictionaries don’t measure realness; they serve as rough proxies for the extent of a word’s use.
Or as noted in the FAQ section of Merriam-Webster’s website,
Most general English dictionaries are designed to include only those words that meet certain criteria of usage across wide areas and over extended periods of time. As a result, they may omit words that are still in the process of becoming established, those that are too highly specialized, or those that are so informal that they are rarely documented in professionally edited writing. The words left out are as real as those that gain entry; the former simply haven’t met the criteria for dictionary entry – at least not yet (newer ones may ultimately gain admission to the dictionary’s pages if they gain sufficient use).
Going further, in a rather enjoyable diatribe on this general topic, professor of linguistics at Stanford, Arnold Zwicky, states,
We start with the admonition that people of taste and refinement should not use X. This is then exaggerated, elevated to the admonition that people, in general, should not use X; what should govern the behavior of the “best” of us (those are genuine sneer quotes) in certain circumstances should govern the behavior of all of us, all of the time, in all contexts, for all purposes. (What a remarkable lack of nuance! What a divorcement from the complex textures of social life!)
As if that weren’t enough, it ratchets up, hysterically, one more notch, to the bald assertion that X simply isn’t available for use; it’s just not part of the social repertoire. My dear, it just isn’t done.
But if it truly isn’t done, then there’s no need for the admonitions.
Don’t tell me there’s “no such word”. Parade your idiosyncratic prejudices, if you wish, and if your mind is open enough we might be able to talk about the bases of your prejudices (and mine). But don’t lie to me about the state of the language.
(Two other great similar rants we recommend are linguist professor Mark Leberman’s Snoot? Bluck. and Stephen Fry’s, Language.)
Backing up this slightly philosophical point of view with real world usage is a 2011 paper published in Science, “Quantitative Analysis of Culture Using Millions of Digitized Books”, which analyzes the language used in 5,195,769 books (about 4% of all books ever published). Among other things, they found that when comparing words used in those books to the OED and Merriam-Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, even when excluding proper nouns (which those dictionaries don’t include), “a large fraction of the words in our lexicon (63%) were in this lowest frequency bin. As a result, we estimated that 52% of the English lexicon – the majority of the words used in English books – consists of lexical ‘dark matter’ undocumented in standard references.”
On a similar note, with regards to not just what constitutes a word, but proper usage, the OED also distances themselves from carrying that banner, stating quite frankly,
The Oxford English Dictionary is not an arbiter of proper usage, despite its widespread reputation to the contrary. The Dictionary is intended to be descriptive, not prescriptive. In other words, its content should be viewed as an objective reflection of English language usage, not a subjective collection of usage ‘dos’ and ‘don’ts’.
In the end, language is an ever evolving beast and really any combination of letters can count as a word if said combination has or is given some meaning; and grammatical conventions exist to serve language, not the other way around.
For reference here, the venerable OED *only* contains about 600,000 entries, with most lexicographers estimating there are probably actually about twice that many words in the English language. (There is much debate on this, however, owing to what actually counts as a distinct word. For instance, Webster’s Third New International Dictionary lists 12 distinct words spelled “post”. On top of this, there are numerous regional slang terms largely unknown by the general speaker of English that would never be included in most dictionaries. On that note, Wordnik, which seeks to document every word ever appearing in the English language, regardless of dialect or how obscure the word is, currently has almost seven million unique entries!)
Alright, so now we’ve laid to rest the popular notion that dictionaries are the bastions of what counts as a word or not. If even the OED isn’t including every word, then what is required for a word to make it into their distinguished record of the English language?
In two words- sustained usage.
Or to quote the OED on their general method:
The OED requires several independent examples of the word being used, and also evidence that the word has been in use for a reasonable amount of time. The exact time-span and number of examples may vary: for instance, one word may be included on the evidence of only a few examples, spread out over a long period of time, while another may gather momentum very quickly, resulting in a wide range of evidence in a shorter space of time. We also look for the word to reach a level of general currency where it is unselfconsciously used with the expectation of being understood: that is, we look for examples of uses of a word that are not immediately followed by an explanation of its meaning for the benefit of the reader. We have a large range of words under constant review, and as items are assessed for inclusion in the dictionary, words which have not yet accumulated enough evidence are kept on file, so that we can refer back to them if further evidence comes to light.
Evidence of a potential new word’s use is provided mostly by volunteers who pore over everything from magazines to obscure scientific journals as part of something dubbed the “Reading Programme”, which “recruits voluntary and paid readers, and these readers provide the OED editors with quotations which illustrate how words are used.”
These quotations are all meticulously catalogued and if they happen to contain a new word or “new sense of an existing word” editors aren’t familiar with it can easily be cross-referenced with other quotations to see if it needs to be added to the dictionary or perhaps investigated further.
As it is the mission of the OED to provide “a permanent record of [a word’s] place in the language”, once a word is deemed worthy to be added to the dictionary, as previously noted, it will never be removed, regardless of whether or not it later falls out of use.
The reasoning behind this is twofold- first, to ensure the OED remains as close to a definitive record of the English language as practically possible; second, to ensure a reader can be reasonably confident that a large percentage of the time, any word they do not know the definition or meaning of will be found in the OED. To quote the OED website: “The idea is that a puzzled reader encountering an unfamiliar word in, say, a 1920s novel, will be able to find the word in the OED even if it has been little used for the past fifty years.”
Though admirable, a side-effect of this dedication to broadly documenting the English language is that editors struggle mightily to keep up with the rate at which language evolves. For example, the complete Third Edition of the OED, the hotly anticipated follow-up to the Second Edition, isn’t set to be completed until around the late 2030s and at an estimated production cost of around £34 million (about $45 million).
As an idea of how painstakingly slowly this process is, in 2010 the Third Edition was estimated to be 28% complete. At the time, around 80 lexicographers, then led by John Simpson, had been working on it for 21 years…
In fact, Simpson ended up retiring in 2013 after 24 years of working on the OED3, with the chief editor job falling to then 48 year old Michael Proffitt. Given the estimates for the completion of the Third Edition, Proffitt will be around 70 years old, and perhaps himself retired, by the time it’s finished.
So yeah, Game of Thrones fans, if you think you Throners have had it bad waiting for the next book in the series to be finished, spare a thought for us OEDers. (Though, at least in our case, we get regular published updates on the work as small sections are completed.)
Now, although it is the policy of the OED to never remove a word from the dictionary, they do release abridged versions containing what they feel reflects “the living English language” at the time, or in some editions a set of words curated to be suitable for a given audience.
Towards this end, the OED, and other dictionaries, regularly remove what they feel are “obsolete” words from newer editions of abridged versions. This has historically been done for the sake of cost and size practicality, though the digital age is rapidly making this less of a concern.
To illustrate how much of a problem this historically has been, however, consider the Second Edition of the OED, which consists of a collection of a whopping 20 volumes and roughly 22,000 pages; that’s a lot of paper, binding, and shipping. The end cost to the consumer for that complete set is in turn about $1100. (And it should be noted that, according to Chief Executive of Oxford University Press, Nigel Portwood, the OED has never made a profit, even with such prices, not to mention the $295 annual fee if one wants access to the online digital edition.)
Obviously the market for such a massive physical product is very niche, and most word-nerds these days who do have a use for the product use the digital version anyway, including ourselves, as it’s a vastly superior research tool. (This is, in part, why the completed much longer Third Edition will likely never be printed.) But concise print editions are still somewhat commonly used, at least for now, so it makes sense to trim some of the more extraneous content and release an abridged version that doesn’t cost as much as a flight to Hawaii or take up an entire bookshelf.
So how is it decided which words won’t make the cut in these concise editions? Well this process varies from publisher to publisher, although the typical method seems to be simply going through the previous edition with a fine toothed comb to look for words that are no longer terribly common in a given sphere- hopefully finding more words that are acceptable to cut than new words that need added, though this seems rarely to be the case.
For example, Angus Stevenson, the head of dictionary projects at the Oxford University Press was tasked with cutting 200 words from the 12th edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary to make way for around 400 newer words in 2011. To accomplish this, he had to rejigger the font and formatting in the dictionary to avoid having to cut too many words still in relatively popular use.
Editors at Collins dictionary had to do more or less the same thing when they excised some 2000 words from their 2008 edition to make way for newer words more familiar to modern English speakers. The senior editor of the dictionary, Cormac McKeown, would later explain that to accomplish this, “We’ve been fiddling around with the typeface to try to get more in, but it is at saturation point. There is a trade-off between getting them in and legibility.”
Unfortunately, this inevitably leads to familiar, but somewhat obsolete, words being removed. For example, in the aforementioned 12th edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary, amongst the entries culled were the likes of “cassette player” in favor of things like “mankini” (though “cassette tape” still remained, contrary to what was stated in many dozens of news reports we read concerning this).
This process can become highly controversial, such as happened in the case of the Oxford Junior Dictionary, where they decided to cut out about 50 words connected to nature, like “acorn” and “buttercup”, using the freed up space to add words like “chatroom” and “blog”. As the latter new technologies have given rise to everyone having a platform for their outrage (and the media loving a good controversy surrounding a major brand for the clicks it brings), naturally, this resulted in a well-published outcry over the removal of words describing the “outside” world in favor of the “interior, solitary”.
Of course, these words weren’t actually being removed from the English language (nor common usage), merely a Junior Edition of the dictionary which could only include a minuscule 10,000 or so of the over 600,000 entries found in the OED. In the end, the editors simply chose words that best reflect those that kids today most frequently use or encounter.
So to sum up the question posed at the start of this article, if you’re referring to complete editions of certain major dictionaries, like the OED, once a word is added to it, it will never be removed. However, if you’re referring to the more commonly found various abridged dictionaries lying around, words are removed whenever the respective editors decide they are no longer as relevant as other words, even if sometimes those cut words are still relatively commonly used… Bringing us all back to the point that if ever someone picks up such a dictionary and tells you the word you just used “isn’t a word because it’s not in the dictionary”, you have our permission to slap them upside the head* with that very tome of knowledge and then politely tell them that’s not how dictionaries or languages work…
(*Full disclosure: we may be slightly oversensitive on this topic owing to having published over six million words online read by millions of people from various dialects of English… Certain Grammar Nazis, or as I prefer to refer to this flavour, “Grammar Nazi’s”, as opposed to regular pro word-nerds we have the utmost respect for and are usually extremely helpful and polite- not to mention generally vastly more flexible with language than their Grammar Nazi counterparts- have, naturally, created something of a perpetually open wound for us on this one over the years. For instance, “anyways” is a word, dammit, has been around in English since at least the 13th century, and we have no plans to stop using it- if for no other reason than out of unabashedly petty spite. ;-))
If you liked this article, you might also enjoy our new popular podcast, The BrainFood Show (iTunes, Spotify, Google Play Music, Feed), as well as:
- Did English Speakers Really Not Use Contractions in the 19th Century as Depicted in True Grit?
- The Truth About Prepositions and the End of Sentences
- The Bizarre Reason Split Infinitives Were Briefly Considered Incorrect Grammatically
- Noah Webster and Moving Away from British English
- What Makes a Vowel a Vowel and a Consonant a Consonant
Bonus Facts:
- Erin McKean is not just a distinguished linguist we have a little bit of a crush on, but also the creator of Mckean’s law- “Any correction of the speech or writing of others will contain at least one grammatical, spelling or typographical error.”
- In 2008, in an attempt to draw attention to the plight of obsolete words, Collins dictionary invited celebrities and the public to “adopt” an archaic word to prevent it being cut from that year’s edition of the dictionary. Some of the more amusing words put up for adoption include “niddering” meaning “cowardly”, “fusby” meaning “fat, short or squat”, “Vilipend” meaning “to treat or regard with contempt”, “threequel” meaning “the third film, book, event, etc. in a series; a second sequel”, and “wittol” meaning “a man who tolerates his wife’s infidelity”.
Expand for References
Emotions, intentions, thoughts and ideas. We use language to pull abstractions from the ether and transform them into concrete communication tools. How could we progress as a culture unless we shared a common understanding for popular words in the English language, such as book, friend, laugh, think or often, or uncommon words like biblioklept, nauseant or hirquiticke?
But that doesn’t mean words don’t fall out of fashion. In 2021, nine words were removed from dictionaries, or classified as «archaic,» «historical» or «obsolete.» Aerodrome, for example, was determined to no longer be applicable to modern life because we collectively call airplane landing fields «airports.» Likewise, «frutescent,» which refers to an object or person having the appearance of a shrub, was removed from the Merriam-Webster dictionary, as was «frigorific,» which has been replaced by the more commonly used «frigid.»
So who, exactly, makes the decision to remove a word from a dictionary?
The culling of dictionary words is left to lexicographers, who not only decide which words to remove but also add new words and update changing definitions or pronunciations. Lexicographers also are responsible for adding new words. In 2022, for example, «demisexual» and «vaxxed» were new additions to the Oxford English Dictionary, along with «humblebrag,» which was added to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
Whether it’s the Oxford English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster Dictionary, American Heritage Dictionary — or an exclusively digital version such as Dictionary.com — each type of dictionary has its own process for removing words and this information isn’t always publicly available. While some dictionaries don’t share the decision-making tree for word removal, the American Heritage Dictionary removes words created before the year 1755 that are only sporadically used in modern life.
When lexicographers remove a word from the dictionary, it doesn’t mean that word ceases to exist. It also means that we, collectively, have the power to influence which words stay. If you’d like to return «skedaddle» to popular usage, then you’d better get to it — fast.
Truth is, it’s actually quite difficult for a word to lose its place in a dictionary. Lexicographers don’t take word-removal lightly. When a word comes into question, dictionary editors will embark on a rigorous examination of meaning, usage and popularity across sprawling language databases that cover a variety of mediums. Often, words that are marked for deletion from printed dictionaries are allowed to remain part of online dictionaries. This culling process for print editions allows dictionaries to remain relevant and, frankly, portable. Without removing words, we’d need a wheelbarrow to move our paper dictionaries like the Oxford English Dictionary, which contains about 600,000 entries — an estimated half of all the words used in the English language.
Despite carefully executed word addition and removal procedures, dictionaries aren’t impervious to mistakes. For a time, «redripening» appeared in most dictionaries as one word, when it actually should have been hyphenated, as in a «red-ripening» strawberry.
The lexicographers behind some dictionaries have even wised up to competitors scraping their content and remarketing it as their own. The Oxford English Dictionary once included the fake word «esquivalience,» along with the made-up definition of «the willful avoidance of one’s official responsibilities,» so they could spot other dictionaries ripping off their copyrighted work.
Do you know that old-timey words would be removed from the dictionary and do not get added to the next edition? In this article, we will discuss how are words removed from the dictionary and some of the recently deleted words.
How Do Words Get Removed from a Dictionary?
English is a language that evolves and changes constantly. Every year, thousands of words are getting added to the dictionary as it is an enlarging volume. Some words come from pop culture which gives rise to slang words. Definitions of the word might also change and shift, hence common words gain new meanings and nuances. Similarly, some words also become obsolete resulting in those words taken out of the dictionary.
The Single Most Comprehensive Record of the English Language Is the Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary.
- A. True
- B. False
Each year around 1,000 words are getting added to the dictionary. Some of the new dictionary additions include self-isolate & forehead thermometer and abbreviations include WFH & PPE. But the process of removing words does not happen as frequently as adding words. Only very few words are removed from the dictionary. The words that are taken out are categorized and labeled as “obsolete” and “old-fashioned” according to the Collins English dictionary. And “Now hist” and “Obs” are some of the labels used by “Oxford English Dictionary”.
how to remove words from the dictionary? The Oxford English Dictionary covers the English language for more than 1,000 years and it’s considered definitive and authoritative. But there are also many other dictionaries that are considered reliable and have their own process of addition and removal of words. The American Heritage Dictionary is one such trustworthy dictionary that uses the year 1755 as the cut-off year. This is to identify words that are obsolete and archaic. Any word that is defined archaic has “sporadic” print evidence of its use after the year 1755. Any word that is considered obsolete is one with “little or no” evidence of its use after 1755 and these types of words are cut-off and do not be added to the subsequent print editions of the dictionary.
Some of the words you may not find in the next print edition of the dictionary include, Embrabgle, Fubsy, Skir, and Frutescent.
Who Decides the Words to Delete?
Lexicographers(dictionary editors) are the ones responsible for deciding which words are deleted and which are added. They make sure to keep up-to-date on the words that are in circulation across various mediums. If a word is marked for deletion, it might still remain in online dictionaries even after they are removed from print editions.
What Are Some Recently Deleted Words?
Vitamin G, snollygoster, hodad, and sternforemost are some of the words that Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary added to their chopping block. This means these words will no longer be used.
Some words that can no longer be used and their meanings:
- Jargogle- This word is from the 1960s and it means to jumble or confuse.
- Apricity- This word dates back to 1620s and it means the warmness of the sun in winter.
- Gorgonize- This means to have a mesmerizing effect on someone and this comes from the 18th century.
- Curglaff- It is a Scottish word from the 1800s and it indicates the sudden shock when one plunges into the cold water.
- Houppelande- It means the outer garment and it was used in Europe in the medieval period.
- Elflock- A tangled lock of hair. Supposedly tangled by Elves.
- Grumpish- This word from the 1720s means sullen or grumpy.
- Pismire- It simply means mall insects like ants.
- Twattle- This means to gossip.
- Snowbrowth- This refers to freshly melted snow.
The single most comprehensive record of the English language is the Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. However, the other common editions of all dictionaries remove obsolete and sometimes, even words that do not fit anymore. Addition and removal of words reflect additional social changes as the foundation of the dictionary depends on the perspective of those who have written it. Therefore, the dictionary is not neutral. In 2019, 30,000 signatures were signed to remove sexist words from the dictionaries.
Have you heard any of these words: «ambassade», «latrant», or «princox»? Despite all of them occurring in Samuel Johnson’s 1755 dictionary, it’s very likely you haven’t. If listed in dictionaries (they aren’t in NOAD), you will see them listed as archaic, which means that nobody really uses them anymore. In other words, they have essentially been removed from the language. As you go back further and further in time you’ll see more and more words like this, especially with Old English.
As for whether dictionaries remove words, that depends on the dictionary. For print dictionaries, the answer is almost always yes, words are removed. The notable exception was the Oxford English Dictionary, when it was in print, because it is, in part, a historical dictionary. In addition, online dictionaries don’t tend to remove words, since there’s not much cost and some potential benefit to keeping them. The policies for adding/removing words for both the OED and Oxford’s main online dictionary can be found here. In contrast, see this article to see their philosophy about their printed children’s dictionary and this article for a discussion of what words they removed from the Oxford Concise English Dictionary (every year it’s discussed because people get upset about it).