The Top Ten: Words used only with one other word...

 

John Rentoul
Sunday 15 December 2013 10:18 EST
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As Woody Allen once said, “If you’re tired, we can walk amok.”
As Woody Allen once said, “If you’re tired, we can walk amok.” (Getty Images)

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Stewart Wood, shadow minister without portfolio, asked about obsolete words that survive only in idiomatic phrases, such as serried and batten.

I have previously insisted that the use of squib, bated, scot and knell was compulsory, provided that they were detached from their familiar partners. Here are some more…

1. Fettle. Dudgeon. Shrift. Shebang. (All nominated by Tom Freeman.)

2. Figment. (Thanks to Arieh Kovler.)

3. Swingeing (Courtesy of Ten-Acre Wines.)

4. Unsung (From Steve Van Riel.)

5. Amok (Thanks to David Crosbie. As Woody Allen once said, “If you’re tired, we can walk amok.”)

6. Hale (From Danny Kemp.)

7. Fledged (From my colleague Andy McSmith.)

8. Inclement (Via Michael Crick.)

9. Clarion (Courtesy of Peter Campbell.)

10. Dulcet. (Halcyon Joel Carter.)

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