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32 Well-Known Slang Words No Longer Used

32 Well-Known Slang Words No Longer Used

The English language dates back to the mid-5th to 7th centuries, having been brought over to the United Kingdom by migrants from what is now southern Denmark, northwest Germany, and the Netherlands. While the current version of English dates to 1450 CE, it is always evolving as words come into and go out of common usage. Some old words fade away for unclear reasons, while others become obsolete due to advances in technology.

Though no one says “fourscore” for twenty anymore, it’s still familiar from the Gettysburg Address. While few may know what a “scaramouche” is, they’d recognize the term from Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” and some words, like egad and zounds, are euphemistic versions of swear words or blasphemous language.

Just 20 years ago, terms like “Walkman” and “floppy disk” were ubiquitous, whereas now they belong in museums. Other words like “horseless carriage” or “Walkman” were common until recently, but sound outdated today

Using Lexico.com’s list of Archaic Words That Used To Be Common In English, 24/7 Tempo compiled a list of once-popular words and expressions no one uses anymore. This list contains once-popular words and sayings dating back to the 16th century or earlier. Most people would have to look up their meanings now.

New words have emerged as old phrases decline, taking their place in the evolving English language. (These are 36 old words we use today with completely new meaning.)

Here are 32 popular slang terms and phrases that no one uses anymore

1. Mooncalf

Source: andriano_cz / Getty Images

Source: andriano_cz / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

While the use of the word mooncalf, which is a foolish or absentminded person, is no longer in use, it has made a reappearance in popular culture. Harry Potter fans will know that a mooncalf is a shy magical creature that only comes out of its burrow when there’s a full moon.

2. Yclept

Source: artisteer / Getty Images

Source: artisteer / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: Old English

The Old English word, Yclept, or “by the name of,” is an extremely old word. It’s also one of the small number of English words that have ‘y’ as a vowel at the beginning.

3. Egad

Source: Deagreez / Getty Images

Source: Deagreez / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

Believed to derive from Oh God, the word Egad was once used to express surprise or anger. Some of the words on our list are minced oaths — euphemistic versions of profane or blasphemous terms.

4. Scaramouche

Source: Khosrork / Getty Images

Source: Khosrork / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

The Scaramouche — which is a boastful but cowardly person — was a stock character in Italian comedy three centuries ago. Scaramouche was famously reintroduced into popular culture, if not everyday use, when it featured in the lyrics of Queen’s song “Bohemian Rhapsody.”

5. Avaunt

Source: Nikhil Patil / Getty Images

Source: Nikhil Patil / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 15th century

Avaunt is a Middle English word meaning go away — and it has gone away. It dates back to the 15th century. It derives from Latin by way of Anglo-French and means forward or before.

6. Gadzooks

Source: skynesher / Getty Images

Source: skynesher / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

Gadzooks, an expression of surprise, shock, or annoyance, and used as a mild oath, is said to be an alteration of God’s hooks, the nails that held Jesus to the cross.

7. Walkman

Source: jirkaejc / Getty Images

Source: jirkaejc / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 20th century

The Sony Walkman, a portable cassette player, debuted in 1979 and was in production for 30 years. At one point, it seemed like everybody had a Walkman, but now it is a rarity. The cassette is also history — it gave way to the CD, which gave way to the digital download.

8. Fourscore

Source: Library of Congress / Getty Images

Source: Library of Congress / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 13th century

A score is twenty, and fourscore means four times twenty, or eighty. The term dates back to the 13th century. While it’s no longer used in everyday speech, it’s embedded in the American psyche as the first word of President Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address: “Fourscore and seven years ago…”

9. Horseless carriage

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Source: Hulton Archive / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 19th century

Horseless carriage was an early name for the automobile and dates back to the end of the 19th century. Prior to that, horses were commonly used to pull carriages, but now, nobody says horseless carriage. Even motor car sounds dated.

10. Zounds

Source: master1305 / Getty Images

Source: master1305 / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

Zounds is an expression of surprise or indignation and dates back to the 1600s, and is another minced oath. It is said to be a euphemism, or an abbreviation, of God’s wounds.

11. Bumper

Source: OlegEvseev / Getty Images

Source: OlegEvseev / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

Bumper has a variety of meanings, one of which is a generous glass of an alcoholic drink. It dates back to the 1600s and was included in Samuel Johnson’s dictionary in 1755. Nobody calls a full glass a bumper now, but they might have a bumper crop.

12. Fandangle

Source: IpekMorel / Getty Images

Source: IpekMorel / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 19th century

Fandangle, which is a useless or purely ornamental thing, dates back to 1835 and is thought to have originated in the southern United States. It may derive from fandango, the Spanish dance (which also features in the lyrics of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody”).

13. Ye

Source: monkeybusinessimages / iStock via Getty Images

Source: monkeybusinessimages / iStock via Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: pre-12th century

Ye is the plural of the Old English word for you. While it sounds archaic to American ears it is still commonly used as an informal plural in parts of Britain and Ireland.

14. Ambuscade

Source: chendongshan / Getty Images

Source: chendongshan / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

Ambuscade, meaning ambush, derives from Old Italian by way of Middle French. It originally meant forest, a good place for an ambush and while this form of the word is no longer used, its synonym, ambush, is still used frequently.

15. Baseborn

Source: francescoch / Getty Images

Source: francescoch / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

Baseborn dates back to the 16th century and it means of low birth or social standing. It’s probably a good thing that it’s no longer used as it reflects class consciousness and the stigmatization of illegitimacy that is no longer acceptable.

16. Coxcomb

Source: AnnBaldwin / Getty Images

Source: AnnBaldwin / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

Coxcomb started out as cock’s comb or cockscomb. It was the traditional cap worn by a jester — a professional fool — and resembled a rooster. In the 16th century, it came to mean a vain and conceited man or dandy.

17. Buss

Source: Image Source / Getty Images

Source: Image Source / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

Buss, a kiss, is an informal 16th-century word that is no longer in use. It is akin to the French noun baiser and the German Kuss.

18. Peeler

Source: Antoine Francois Jean Claudet / Getty Images

Source: Antoine Francois Jean Claudet / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 19th century

Peeler was once the term in Britain for a police constable but was then used to refer to all police officers in the area. The term derived from Sir Robert Peel (1788 – 1850), who established London’s Metropolitan Police Force. The term Bobbies, which was also inspired by Sir Robert, is still in use.

19. Apothecary

Source: London Express / Getty Images

Source: London Express / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Apothecary is a word meaning a person who prepares and sells medicine and is derived from the Latin word apotheca, or storehouse. Two words with similar origins are still in use — bodega and boutique.

20. Camelopard

Source: ZU_09 / Getty Images

Source: ZU_09 / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Camelopard, or giraffe, dates back to the 14th century. While it has Greek and Latin roots and is totally archaic, it’s easy enough to see its origin — it combines the words for camel and leopard.

21. Floppy Disk

Source: filonmar / Getty Images

Source: filonmar / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 20th century

Floppy disks were widely used for data storage from the mid-1970s up to the beginning of the 21st century. They are no longer used for anything and so the term is no longer used.

22. Handmaid

Source: Heritage Images / Getty Images

Source: Heritage Images / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Handmaid, meaning a female servant, dates back to the 1300s. Today, very few people have servants, and nobody has handmaids. However, the term reentered popular culture because of the success of Margaret Atwood’s novel “The Handmaid’s Tale” and its television series adaptation.

23. Forsooth

Source: isayildiz / Getty Images

Source: isayildiz / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: pre-12th century

Forsooth, meaning indeed, has Old English roots and was used before the 12th century. During  Shakespearian times, it meant in truth, or certainly. While it is archaic, it is still sometimes used ironically.

24. Rapscallion

Source: STUDIOGRANDOUEST / Getty Images

Source: STUDIOGRANDOUEST / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 17th century

Rapscallion, a mischievous person, derives from the word rascal and was in use from the 17th century. It began as rascallion, coming from the Old French word rascaille, and somebody added the “p” to make the meaning even worse.

25. Bibliopole

Source: normallens / Getty Images

Source: normallens / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

The first use of bibliopole for a dealer in books was in the 16th century. It has Greek roots and combines the words for book and sell. Although it was used to refer to a bookseller, it wasn’t just your average seller of books – it was intended to convey one who sells or deals in used and rare books. While bibliopoles aren’t common any longer, bibliophiles certainly are.

26. Dame

Source: fizkes / Getty Images

Source: fizkes / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Dame has Latin and French roots and came to mean an elderly or mature woman in the 14th century. It came to be a slang term for any woman in America in the early 20th century. Its popularity was reflected in the 1949 Richard Rodgers song, “There is Nothin’ Like a Dame,” but it has been out of favor for a long time.

27. Strumpet

Source: Heritage Images / Getty Images

Source: Heritage Images / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Strumpet is a Middle English word, meaning a female prostitute or a promiscuous woman, that appeared in the 14th century. It’s archaic but made a reappearance in James Plunkett’s 1969 novel “Strumpet City,” about Dublin in the early 20th century.

28. Aliment

Source: sveta_zarzamora / Getty Images

Source: sveta_zarzamora / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 15th century

Aliment, meaning food or nourishment, dates from the 15th century and comes from the Latin alere, meaning to nourish. While nobody says aliment anymore, everybody has an alimentary canal, the tube in the body through which food passes.

29. Circumjacent

Source: MR1805 / Getty Images

Source: MR1805 / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 15th century

Circumjacent, meaning surrounding, originated in the 15th century and combines the Latin words for around and to lie. We still use words with these components, such as circumnavigate (to travel around) and adjacent (next to).

30. Jakes

Source: grandriver / Getty Images

Source: grandriver / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

The word jakes has multiple meanings, one of which means an outdoor toilet and dates back at least to the 16th century. There doesn’t seem to be agreement about the origin — some suggest it derives from the French name Jacques. The cognate jacks is still used in Ireland.

31. Cutpurse

Source: AndreyPopov / Getty Images

Source: AndreyPopov / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 14th century

Even if it is no longer used regularly, the meaning and derivation of cutpurse should be clear to most people. A cutpurse is a pickpocket, and the word has been used since the 14th century when people would carry their purses held by a strap or string.

32. Intelligencer

Source: mrtom-uk / Getty Images

Source: mrtom-uk / Getty Images
  • When this word was first in use: 16th century

The word intelligence, used to describe a person who gathers intelligence, dates back to the 1580s. It also appeared as the name of a newspaper in the following century. While the former meaning is archaic, there are still Intelligencers being published in various parts of the United States and Canada.

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