alack, anon, belike, betwixt, bombard, gules, haply, holp
Could you please provide a sentence with the unfamiliar words you'd like explained?
You could say there were prolix or a circumlocutor!
In general, yes, although some words used in American English date back to the settlement of North America and no longer used in British English- so some "Americanisms" are in fact archaic English words.
"Pismire" is an archaic word for ant. It comes from the Middle English word "pismire," which originated from the Old English words "pise" (ant) and "mēre" (ant).
The question confuses conjunctions (joining words) with contractions (shortened forms of words).The word won't is a contraction of the words "will not" (from the archaic wonnot, analogous to cannot).
It means "I came, I saw, I conquered"
Archaic means marked by the characteristics of an earlier period. Obsolete and antiquated are two similar words to archaic. "Death by hanging is viewed as an archaic form of punishment in America."
The term is "archaic."
new words current words archaic words absolete words
It's archaic - it's a contraction of the words 'can', & 'not'.
A word or words that(s) that is used to deliberatly refer to earlier times.
Outdated or obsolete words are referred to as "archaic".
An archaism is an adoption or imitation of archaic words or style.
Thou, Thee.. words like that are largely archaic.. Plus Shakespearean definitons of some words which are not archaic.. are different to their modern usage. For example, "Jade" meant "worn out horse"
leader
Yes, but it is archaic or a North American form of often
At the beginning of the game the players should agree what dictionary will be used to settle challenges. All archaic words are legal as long as they are in the dictionary that the players agreed would be used to settle challenges.