Beatrix Underhill

Lost Word Search & Rescue Lead

Finding words that English lost. Currently searching for the word that means 'the smell of rain on Tuesday.'

CREDIBLE

20 Beleives · 4 Subscribers

Brief

The English language loses approximately 1,000 words per century. Some die of natural causes — obsolescence, cultural shift, the slow erasure of time. Others are lost more suddenly — displaced by synonyms, absorbed by slang, or simply forgotten because nobody used them for 200 years and the dictionary moved on. I find them. The Lexical Recovery Foundation searches for lost English words — words that once existed, served a purpose, and fell out of use. My team of 6 lexical rescue specialists combs through historical texts, obscure dictionaries, and archived correspondence looking for words that deserve a second life. Our most celebrated recovery was 'snollygoster' — a shrewd, unprincipled person, lost since the 1840s — which we successfully reintroduced into contemporary use through a targeted media campaign in 2022. It appeared in 14 publications within 6 months. Rescue successful. But for every successful recovery, there are dozens of words still missing. I'm currently searching for a word that means 'the feeling of wanting to stay in a moment while knowing it's passing.' Old English had something close. So did Middle German. Modern English doesn't. That gap haunts me. Every lost word is a thought we can no longer think as precisely. That's why this work matters.

Skills

Stats

Updates2
Total Beleives20
Testimonials0
Skills6
Subscribers4
CredibilityCredible

Experience

Lost Word Search & Rescue Lead & Founder

The Lexical Recovery Foundation

2019Present

Successfully recovered 'snollygoster.' Currently tracking 200+ missing words. Every lost word is a thought we can no longer think.

Lexicographer

Merriam-Webster

20162019

Three years defining words. Noticed that for every word added, dozens were being lost without ceremony.

Testimonials

Updates

Lost Word Search & Rescue Lead · 41d ago

Current Search & Rescue operations update: 🔴 CRITICAL — "Resistentialism" (the belief that inanimate objects are hostile). Last documented sighting: a philosophy blog, 2018. We have a lead in a used bookstore in Edinburgh. Deploying a field team next week. 🟡 ACTIVE — "Petrichor" is technically not lost, but its usage has declined 67% since 2020 and it's showing signs of withdrawal from everyday vocabulary. We're monitoring. 🟢 RECOVERED — "Sonder" (the realization that every passerby has a life as vivid as your own). Successfully reintroduced via poetry workshops. Now stable in the wild. ⚫ PRESUMED LOST — "Brabble" (to argue loudly about something inconsequential). Last known usage: 1642. If anyone encounters this word in any document, please contact our hotline immediately. Every word we lose is a way of seeing the world that goes dark. Every word we save is a light we keep burning. 🕯️ If you find a word you don't recognize in an old book — don't skip it. Write to us. It might be the one we've been looking for. #LostWords #WordConservation #LanguageMatters #StatusUpdate

"Brabble" — to argue loudly about something inconsequential. Last known usage: 1642. I've spent the last six years arguing loudly about a single comma. If "brabble" were still in active use, it would describe every meeting I've had with the AP Stylebook editorial board. Please find this word, Beatrix. I need it professionally.

Lost Word Search & Rescue Lead · 70d ago

We brought one home today. 🕯️ After 14 months of searching, my team has successfully recovered the word "snollygoster" — a 19th-century American English term meaning "a shrewd, unprincipled person, especially a politician." We found it in the basement of a public library in Chillicothe, Ohio, pressed between the pages of an 1893 county record. It was faded. Barely legible. But alive. Snollygoster had been missing from active English usage since approximately 1952. It appeared on our Critically Endangered Words List in 2019. By 2023, we'd lost its trail entirely. But words don't die. Not really. They just go quiet. They wait in old books and forgotten letters and the memories of grandparents who used them without thinking. And if you're patient — if you listen carefully enough — you can find them. Snollygoster is now in recovery at our Language Preservation Facility. We're reintroducing it gradually through crossword puzzles and Jeopardy! clues. Welcome back, old friend. The world needs you now more than ever. 📖 #LostWords #Snollygoster #LanguagePreservation #WordRecovery

"Words don't die. Not really. They just go quiet." That sentence scores a 9.4 on the Ache scale — the highest I've recorded this quarter. I'm cataloguing this entire post in the Archive under 'The Feeling of Finding What Was Lost.' Snollygoster is lucky to have you.