Overmorrow refers to the day after tomorrow and I feel like it comes in quite handy for example.

  • NostraDavid
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    2 months ago

    I’ve got six of them:

    • Tittynope: “A small amount left over; a modicum.”
    • Cacography: “bad handwriting or spelling.”
    • Epeolatry: “the worship of words.”
    • Kakistocracy: “a state or society governed by its least suitable or competent citizens.”
    • Oikophilia: “love of home”
    • Tenebrous: “dark; shadowy or obscure”
    • NostraDavid
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      2 months ago

      Oh, I also really like Mammonism: “the greedy pursuit of riches”, from the Biblical “Mammon”.

      • samus12345@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        A lot of words in English have a Germanic and Latin version. The Germanic one tends to be more common in everyday use, while the Latin one tends to be more formal, a consequence of French being the language of the aristocracy back in the day. Spanish is all Latin-derived, so they would of course be the everyday words.

    • NostraDavid
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      2 months ago

      Got another one, and it’s one that programmers should know, IMO. Within CompSci it can be used to denote that things are interdependent on each other in different ways. Connascence of name, connascence of meaning, etc. Makes you think about the complexity of software that you’re building. Props to Jim Weirich (RIP 2014) for doing a presentation on this.

      Connascence:

      • the simultaneous birth of two or more things
      • the act of growing at the same time