26 words that have gone nearly ‘extinct’ in the English language
Our vernacular is always changing. Every generation has its own slang words, from Xennials to Millennials and Gen Z.
In 2025, Dictionary.com deemed ’67’ as the word of the year, the Oxford University Press claimed the word of the year was “rage bait,” and Merriam-Webster claimed it was “slop.”
The phrase that started it all
In an interview with the BBC, host Kate Colin offered an example of words that have disappeared in English when she opened a segment for the broadcasting network with this greeting: “Good morrow! I beseech thee, whence comest thou?” (Translation: “Good morning. Where do you come from?”)
Colin noted that this phrase was “Old English” used hundreds of years ago, and a great example of “disappearing words.” Colin’s co-host Jackie Dalton added, “Yes, English is a language which is evolving all the time. So this mean there are new words continuously appearing, and older words are disappearing.”
In English, words are here today and will likely be gone tomorrow. Language lovers on Reddit shared their favorite old-fashioned words that have gone nearly “extinct” in English today (and many they wish would make a comeback).
26 disappearing words
“Overmorrow. It means ‘the day after tomorrow’.” – TheGloveMan
“I remember the word ‘grody’ from the 90s. It meant gross or yucky.” – Glittering_Age_5591
“Comely (meaning beautiful) and homely (meaning ugly).” –........
