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Abandoned Lexiconic Derivations and Word Associations

Written By Michael Reign on Friday, January 31, 2020 | 10:40 PM


This entry is intended to highlight the myriad of words, phrases, and terminological derivations that have been surreptitiously removed from consciousness by design, by Elitist institutions and agencies whose proprietary objective aligns exclusively with the suppression of knowledge and innovation through a coordinated strategy of attenuated scholasticism.

NOTE: External site links highlighted in red

A

A priori - an adjective emphasizing reasoning or knowledge born of theoretical deduction as opposed to empirical observation or study.

Apocope - a noun derived from phonological discourse referencing the absence of one or more sounds from the end of a word, predominantly in the loss of an unstressed vowel.

Asyndeton - a condensed form of literary expression in which elements joined by conjunctions are intentionally reconstructed in series without the benefit of the aforementioned device.

Auspex - an interpreter or foreteller of omens deriving their prognostications from the observation of the migratory patterns of birds, also known as an augur – a position of authority endemic to ancient Rome¹.

¹ Roman civilization from the founding of the Italian city of Rome in 8th century BC (Before Christ, prior to the Christian era) to the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in 5th century AD (Anno Domini), encompassing the Roman Kingdom (753 BC–509 BC), Roman Republic (509 BC–27 BC) and Roman Empire (27 BC–476 AD) until the fall of the western empire.

B

Bagnio - a noun possessing linguistic variance with Greek (balaneion), Italian (bagno), and Latin (balneum) derivation being the most etymologically prescient. The use of ‘bagno’ in Italian parlance referencing the publicly accessible recreational Baths of Zeuxippus ascribed to Byzantine Constantinople prior to its occupation by a massive Turkish insurgency led by Mehmed II (also known as Mehmed the Conqueror) in 1453 AD that culminated with the establishment of the Ottoman Empire. In Islamic fundamentalist doctrine, bagnios are referred to as hammams – a word whose base interpretation is synonymous with the phrase, “the spreader of warmth.” Other uses for the term possess a socially derogatory connotation, with a prevailing number of inferences focused on the concept of organized prostitution – specifically brothels, massage parlors, or joy houses.
In sections of East Asia, bagnios are identified as incarceration centers for forced labor contingents applicable to the civilian sector.

Brobdingnagian - an adjective used to identify objects or entities of colossal size and scope. The term’s origin traced back to the early vestiges of the 18th Century, having been authored into existence by Irish novelist Jonathan Swift in the pages of a satirical written publication entitled, “Gulliver’s Travels.” Brobdingnagian recognized as the literary extension of the word, “Brobdingnag,” a geographical area inhabited by giants that features prominently in the context of the aforementioned tale.
Proper use of the descriptor requires capitalization in conventional settings given that it was initially derived from a name.

C

Cloaca Gentium - a Latin phrase whose literary equivalent possesses three distinctive interpretations:

1) Human cesspool
2) Sewer of the nation
3) Drainage ditch of the races

According to a number of historians and their pseudointellectualist adherents occupying positions of authority in contemporary academia, each of these views were seized upon by identitarians as the pretext for the adoption of legislative policy designed to curtail mass migration on the basis that the integration of populations of individuals from ‘Third World’ designated geographical regions into Eurocentric territories and/ or municipalities would invariably culminate with the destruction of their racial/ cultural homogeneity¹. The use of the term appearing in two separate publications: ‘The Races of Europe’ (Published in 1899 and authored by William Z. Ripley), and ‘The Passing of the Great Race’ (Its formal date of release being 1916, with subsequent editions produced in 1918, 1920, and 1921; written by Madison Grant). Both Grant and Ripley believed to have borrowed their ethnosegregationist philosophies from Arthur de Gobineau and Houston Stewart Chamberlain who envisioned the modern world as a compartmentalized tripartite tableau dictated by one’s hereditary predisposition whereby the entirety of civilization could be grouped in accordance with one of three assigned social demographics: “Nordic” (referencing the Anglo-Saxon, white Caucasian biological taxon), “Mongoloid” (synonymous with East Asian, Oriental ethnic segments), “Negroid” (black, African anthropologic designations).

¹ This blanket assumption regarding the possibility of immigration being utilized by globalist proponents to supplant a targeted nation’s customs and traditions through the introduction of ideologically subversive elements conveniently overlooked despite an overabundance of evidence to the contrary, as detailed in a document entitled, ‘Replacement Migration.’ This bipartisan politically-motivated strategy recognized as a transnationally orchestrated plan of contingency devised by the United Nations Population Division to mitigate the prospect of low fertility rates among the indigenous populations of the industrialized world – specifically France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea (South Korea), the Russian Federation, United Kingdom, and the United States – through the migratory influx of foreign nationals from socioeconomically maladjusted regions (Africa, war torn areas of the Middle East, Central and South America, et al.) as a means of bolstering productivity by way of labor force continuity (The calculated increase in sources of expendable labor in the corporate setting designed to exploit the creation of a new multigenerational tax base). In recent years the notion of replacement migration as a means of effecting the displacement of homogenous, or traditionally monoculturalistic sectors of a particular geographic precinct has evinced commonality with the prospect of an ethnically-contrived impetus toward societal mosaicism and diversified inclusivity.

D

Desultory - a term synonymous with apathetic indifference, a noncommittal happenstance characterized by an absence of enthusiasm, lack of coordinated strategy or purpose.

E

Epithalamion - a ballad or poem dedicated to both the bride and bridegroom prior to their departure into the confines of their marital chamber.

Exordium - a noun referencing inception, synonymous with beginning or introduction, especially as it pertains to political discourse or treatise.

F

Fallaciloquence - a noun believed to have been introduced into the English language in 1656, having been a staple of literary vernacular up until 1761. Characterized as mendacious speech patterns or lines of communication devised as a means of effecting the concealment of an ulterior motive.

EXAMPLE: Despite the outward appearance of the geopolitical luminary’s popularity amongst his peers occupying positions of authority in the diplomatic arena, his pattern of behavior in public forums was oftentimes utilized to hone his fallaciloquent tendencies.

Floccinauccinihilipilification - a noun synonymous with triviality, something deemed to possess little intrinsic worth or value.

G

Gardeviance - a term possessing interchangeablity with objects oftentimes utilized as storage repositories for valuables or garments, what is commonly referred to today as a chest or trunk.

H

Hebetudinous - a term associated with lethargy or the manifestation of apathetic indulgence, also suggestive of intellectual deficiency and/ or mental torpor.

Hexastichon - poetic discourse consisting of six stanzas or verses in any one branch of literary composition.

Hypergamy - a term used in social science for the act or practice of a person marrying another of higher caste or social status than themselves. The antonym “hypogamy” refers to the inverse: marrying a person of lower social class or status. Both terms were coined in India in the 19th century while translating classical Hindu law books, which used the Sanskrit terms anuloma and pratiloma, respectively, for the two concepts.

I

Inamorata - a noun referencing an individual’s female love interest.

L

Lingua Franca - a term whose etymological significance can be traced back to 17th Century Italy, the English translation of which is recognized as ‘Frankish language.’ Identified as a linguistic model of communication utilized by certain demographics in place of their native language as their principal means of informational exchange. A broader interpretation of the article lists it as a medium of expression employed by segments of the civilian population whose vernaculars are not mutually intelligible. The term’s first usage in a conventional setting having occurred during the Middle Ages to describe French and Italian-based jargon or pidgin, developed by Crusaders and traders operating in portions of the eastern Mediterranean, the context of which possesses heterogeneous connotation and exists as a transliterative melange of nouns, verbs, and adjectives, later described as oversimplifications of the Romance languages (A prominent feature in Indo-European geographical precincts that originated in Ancient Rome).

N

Nexion - a term authored into existence by David Wulstan Myatt, who, in the context of its description, attributes its conception to one of metaphysical causality, what could be construed as a type of bridge or interface between the astral realm and its acausal, or mathematically predetermined opposite. In mythology, the word’s use is indicative of an interdimensional aperture, oftentimes referred to as a ‘Stargate,’ where energy is harnessed within the confines of an annular superstructure.

Non Sequitur - an inference (verifiable conclusion based on empirical evidence) seemingly unrelated to the initial premise (a syllogistic deduction outlined within the contents of a formal dilemma whereby the conceptualization of outcome is predicated on the notion of assumption) of a hypothetical contrivance. A noun possessing Latin distinction whose literal interpretation coincides with the phrase, “it does not follow.” Non sequitur can also be described as a statement derived from fallacy that deviates from a logically-based train of thought with the intent of eliciting confusion.

Nudiustertian - an expression possessing interchangeability with the phrase, “the day before yesterday,” a time sequence that can also be characterized as two days removed.

O

Obelus - a symbol (†) used as a point of emphasis in written publication, or to indicate that a person is deceased, also characterized as a mark (– or ÷) oftentimes utilized in ancient texts or manuscripts identifying a particular word or passage as spurious, corrupt, or absent of merit. In mathematical computation, it is commonly referred to as the sign of division.

P

Panegyric - public oration or journalistically syndicated content that effectively eulogizes a particular person or event.

Parataxis - a term derived from the Greek portmanteau ‘παράταξις,’ the English translation of which is the “act of placing side by side,” with παρα para “beside” + τάξις táxis “arrangement” being acknowledged as its transliterary equivalent. Identified as a literary device in written or oral communication favoring the use of elongated morphemes, with sentence structure characterized by an absence of conjunction, be it independent or coordinative in composition. It is also used to describe a technique in poetry in which two images or verbally formulated fragments, oftentimes unrelated, are juxtaposed without the benefit of a distinct connection or association. Readers are then tasked with the formulation of their own conclusions based solely on the implicative significance of the prose, whereby the use of deductive reasoning predicated on the nature of the paratactic syntax effectively yields a particular outcome.

Parsimony - a noun referencing the attenuation of monetary expenditures or deprivation of available resources on the basis of necessity, applicable to individuals, corporate entities, and/ or intergovernmental agencies and institutions.
This particular term also utilized as a medium of interpretation whereby the prospect of logical reasoning and deduction rests solely on the premise of theoretical assertion whose finality is predicated on the elimination of assumption or hypothetical conjecture to attain resolution – the characterization of which is oftentimes referred to as the Law of Parsimony, Occam’s, Ockham’s, or Ocham’s Razor.

Peremptory - an adjective precluding the right of one’s refusal, an absence of opportunity relative to debate in a public or private forum, especially as it pertains to the perception of authority. In legal parlance, the term functions as a point of reference concerning the finality of legislative decree, whereby the possibility of extenuating circumstance and/ or contingency, is nullified.

Petrichor - a noun referencing the distinct nature of a particular scent, oftentimes characterized as pleasant or sweet, resulting primarily from the meteorological phenomena of precipitation in traditionally arid environments.

Praxis - a noun referencing the conceptualization of accepted practice, as opposed to hypothetical conjecture – encompassing various professions, disciplines, and artistic endeavors.

Preprandial - an adjective possessing humorous affectation that references an event that occurs prior to lunch or dinner.

Prolegomenon - a term synonymous with the concept of prefatory introduction, oftentimes characterized as critical or discursive (digressing from one subject or medium of interpretation to another) in nature.

Prolix - an adjective utilized in the conveyance of speech or written communication that exhibits monotony.

S

Seigniorage - also spelled seignorage or seigneurage (its etymological convention derived from the Old French dialects of Northern France from the 8th to the 14th Century where ‘seigneuriage,’ is identified as the “right of the lord, or ‘seigneur,’ to mint money”), the concept of seigniorage exists as a function of profit, in that the predetermined value¹ of a nation’s currency is inversely proportional to the cost of its manufacture. In corporate finance there are two separate, yet equally distinct, iterations of the aforementioned principle, with ‘opportunity cost seigniorage’ and ‘extended monetary seigniorage’ used to calculate the rate of inflation as it pertains to price of goods and services in the retail and consumer services sector.

¹ The notion of a currency’s predetermined or assigned market valuation predicated on the caliber or strength of said instrument when compared to the nominal/ face value of the world’s reserve/ anchor currency, in this instance, the USD (United States Dollar), which claimed that mantle of distinction from the United Kingdom’s Pound Sterling in 1944 with the advent of the Bretton Woods Agreement.

LINKED ARTICLES OF REFERENCE

Seigniorage – Overview, History, and Monetary Policy | Corporate Finance Institute

Seigniorage: History and Application in the U.S. Financial Sector | Manfred J.M. Neumann, Professor of Economics • University of Bonn, Germany (April 1992, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis)

Septuagesima - the Latin equivalent of “seventieth,” a term endemic to Catholicism that refers to the ninth Sunday before Easter, the third prior to Ash Wednesday in the liturgical calendar.

Sesquela - a medical term referencing physiological and/ or neuropathic anomaly/ abnormality resulting from a previous illness, disease, or anatomical injury.

Sesquipedalian - a term synonymous with words or phrases possessing polysyllabic attribution.

EXAMPLE: The sesquipedalian prose of scientific journals only served to confound the youth during the course of his preparation for the midterm final.

Solecism - a noun referencing grammatical irregularities in speech or written communication.

Solipsism - philosophical theory, characterized as a radical form of subjective idealism dictated by one’s inability to transcend first person experience, whereby the magnification of self eclipses human knowledge and understanding – and therefore limits the capacity to adapt to the changes thereof – within the external environment. Oftentimes acknowledged as a manifestation of reductio ad absurdum (Latin: “reduction to absurdity”), a type of refutation endemic to logical assertion whereby the notion of consequence is relegated to contradictory or baseless hypothetical conjecture when paired with the proposition of empirical evidence built solely on the premise of denialism as an aspect of necessity.

Syzygy - a noun endemic to astronomical parlance that refers to the trinary alignment of celestial objects.

T

Tenigo - a behavioral impulse characterized by the aberrant desire to engage in sexual activity (Glossary definition from ‘The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Sex,’ a 1954 publication authored by Dr. A. Willy, Dr. L. Vander, and Dr. O. Fisher – Cadillac Publishing Co., Inc.)

Tribade - a medical term possessing Latin etymological distinction, tribas; from Ancient Greek transliteration, τριβάς (tribás), from τρίβω (tríbō, “to rub”). A lesbian engaged in the paraphilic practice of tribadism¹.

¹ Commonly referred to as ‘tribbing’ in pornographic nomenclature. In adult film production tribadistic acts routinely incorporate the simulation of heterosexual themes – predominantly with regard to thrusting motions associated with vaginal penetration – involving two or more nude female participants grinding their exposed vulvas against each other for the purpose of sexual gratification.

U

Ulotrichous - an adjective emphasizing the genetic predisposition of certain segments of the population to possess curly hair.

Urning - legacy medical terminology, synonymous with a person – oftentimes male – actively invested in the homosexual lifestyle.

V

Vulgate - a noun referencing common or colloquial speech patterns. Also identified as the principal Latin version of the Bible, prepared by Saint Jerome (scholar and theologian credited with translating the Holy Scripture from its original Hebrew dialect) in the latter vestiges of the 4th Century, later revised in 1592 and adopted as the primary canonical text of the Roman Catholic Church.
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