Via
Waxy, we found this project from by
Josh Sucher to create a cinematic lexicon of
infrequent words from a data-set of prolix, dialogue-heavy films.

Unsurprisingly, the top tier of one-in-a-billion words come from adaptations of Shakespeare with a close runner-up being the move version of
The Pirates of Penzance and coming in at third overall was the TV new drama
Network, the logophilia of the screen-writer Sidney “Paddy” Chayefsky (
Marty,
The Americanization of Emily,
Paint Your Wagon,
The Hospital and
Altered States) inspiring the endeavour, which includes such terms as oraculate, chateaubriands and auspicatory. The project’s website gives definitions and the lines of dialogue from the film, cross-referencing other uncommon words used in the same production.
synchronoptica
one year ago: a storied gay bar in Seattle (with synchronopticæ), the Great White Way, an unavailable lecture by Grace Hopper plus assorted links to revisit
fourteen years ago: East Bloc architecture plus reading the comments below the fold