“Your new friends sound like an interesting pair. By interesting, I mean unconventional, which is generally a good thing, though not always. I trust you can judge the difference.” FriendsFriendshipsUnconventionalConventionality Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“The myriad ways our words had failed to be bound, and here they were, finally, and there was only one bloody copy.” LanguageWomenBooks Book:The Bookbinder Source: The Bookbinder
“[Esme Nicholl] 'Morbs, Mabel? What does it mean?' [Mabel O'Shaughnessy] 'It's a sadness that comes and goes... I get the morbs, you get the morbs, even Miss Lizzie 'ere gets the morbs, though she'd never let on. A woman's lot, I reckon.' 'It must derive from morbid,' I said to myself.... 'I reckon it derives from grief,' said Mabel. 'From what we've lost and what we've never 'ad and never will. As I said, a woman's lot....” SadnessThe Woman S Lot Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“[Esme] 'And then I was born and then she [her mother Lily] died.' [Edith 'Ditte' Thompson, her godmother] 'Yes.' 'But when we talk about her, she comes to life.' 'Never forget that Esme. Words are our tools of resurrection.” Power Of Words Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“Bondmaid. It came back to me then, and I realized that the words most often used to define us were words that describe our function in relation to others. Even the most benign words - maiden, wife, mother - told the world whether we were virgins or not. What was the male equivalent of maiden? I could not think of it. What was the male equivalent of Mrs., of whore, of common scold? I looked out the window towards the scriptorium, the place where the definitions of all these words were being bedded down. Which words would define me? Which would be used to judge or contain? I was no maiden, yet I was no man’s wife. And I had no desire to be.” InspiringFeminismDefinitionsWomen EmpowermentFeminist LiteratureWords And Meanings Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“It will find its way into the final volumes, I expect,' said Mr. [Fred] Sweetman when we discussed it. 'The poets will see to that. They have a way of adding nuance to the meaning of things.” MeaningPoetsNuance Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“I am beginning to feel the English language is burdened by this war, Es. Everyone I meet has a new word for toilet paper, and I have not heard one that doesn’t accurately convey its origin or the experience of using it. Yet only a handful of words exist to convey a thousand horrors.” WarLossGriefWordsMeaning Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“LOSS 'Sorry for your loss, they say. And I want to know what they mean, because it's not just my boys I've lost. I've lost my motherhood, my chance to be a grandmother. I've lost the easy conversation of neighbours and the comfort of family in my old age. Every day I wake to some new loss that I hadn't thought of before, and I know that soon it will be my mind.' Vivienne Blackman, 1915” Loss Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“The past came towards me, and I closed the book.” ReadingGriefMemory Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“Was I better? Before Shropshire I'd felt broken, as though I would fall should the scaffold of my work be removed. I didn't feel that now, but there was a fine crack through the middle of me, and I suspected it might never mend. I remembered Lizzie apologising to Mrs Lloyd the first time she stayed to chat, for the chip in the cup. 'A chip doesn't stop it from holding tea,' Mrs Lloyd had said.” LossGriefHealing Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“Menstruosity was the condition of being menstruous. And menstruous had once meant horribly filthy or polluted. Menstruous. Like monstrous. It came closest to explaining how I felt. Lizzie had called it “The Curse". She had never heard of menstruation and laughed when I said it.” WomenFeminismDefinitionsFemininityMenstruationVaginas Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“Literately’ was used in a novel by Elizabeth Griffiths. While no other examples of use have been forthcoming, it is, in my opinion, an elegant extension of ‘literate’. Dr. Murray agreed I should write an entry for the Dictionary, but I have since been told it is unlikely to be included. It seems our lady author has not proved herself a ‘literata’- an abomination of a word coined by Samuel Taylor Coleridge that refers to a ‘literary lady’. It too has only one example of use, but its inclusion is assured. This may sound like sour grapes, but I can’t see it catching on. The number of literary ladies in the world is surely so great as to render them ordinary and deserving members of the literati.” InspirationalFeminismWomen EmpowermentAuthorsFeminist Literature Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“...convention [is] the most subtle but oppressive dictator. [Edith 'Ditte' Thompson]” Convention Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“The slip was writhing. I reached in to rescue it, even as the brown paper charred and the letters written on it turned to shadows. I thought I might hold it like an oak leaf, faded and winter-crisp, but when I wrapped my fingers around the word, it shattered.” InspirationSpiritualLossFleetingFragilityPreciousWords Have Power Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“I watched it. For a thousand moments I watched it ride some unseen current of air. I expected it to land on the unswept floor, but it didn't. It glided like a bird, almost landing, then rose up to somersault as if bidden by a genie. I never imagined that it might land in my lap, that it could possibly travel so far. But it did. The word sat in the folds of my dress like a bright thing fallen from heaven. ... After a long while, I scooped the word up, careful not to crush its silvery wings, and brought it close to my face. It was difficult to read in the gloom of my hiding spot. I shuffled along to where a curtain of sparkling dust hung between two chairs.” InspirationSpiritualNatureWonderWordsDustGentlenessFragility Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words
“You are not the arbiter of knowledge, sir. You are its librarian...It is not for you to judge the importance of these words, simply to allow others to do so.” LibraryAccessEquitable Book:The Dictionary of Lost Words Source: The Dictionary of Lost Words