I read dictionaries and thesauri for fun. I had a turn of the century OED in my hands once. Well, it was on a podium. It was big. They had to practically drag me away from it. It was old and musty and filled with all sorts of words I'd never seen or heard before. *covetcovetcovet*
Same here. When i was a young boy, i first started to admire the illustrations in encyclopedic books, then i slowly started developing reading and writing skills before attending school. And i would always find great pleasure in discovering new words. So, i guess that has settled into my personality for good. I also started to become addicted to etymology more recently.
I like how old language and old literature (e.g. Oscar Wilde) has a certain class to it, a beauty and passion - passion that seems lost in the present. It's passion and beauty that I seek in everything, and so I too am drawn to archaic language like you.
The same thing for music from about 1930 till 1980 (some left in 1990/2000), now in 2010, even the really good music seems to be missing something, perhaps it's soul, lost by the exchange of harsh misery for 'soft' misery (e.g. having no food vs. having everything and feeling depressed without knowing why).
Just my 2 cents.
I share your aesthetic position to the t.
Definitely, from the mid-1970s there seems to have been a major paradigm shift, which embraces the haywire over the beautiful.
I guess certain philosophical, technological and social prerequisites for that had their blossom time in the 1950s and 1960s.
Not exactly antiquated but it's a big no-no to use uncommon English words during casual talk. For example, if I use 'dissonance' rather than 'no harmony', my friends pretend that their head hurts or that they'll have nosebleeds.
I only use uncommon words if there's no common English or Filipino term that suits my idea.
Dictionaries are awesome especially now that we have Wiktionary.
Yes, that's a problem i can relate to.
Also a big fan of wiktionary.
No, because in my experience there is oftentimes a presence of social pressure which discourages such behavior. The sentence I just typed, if uttered around most people I know, would almost certainly draw more attention to its relatively abnormal vocabulary rather than to the meaning of the sentence itself. When communicating on this forum that type of linguistic constraint is evidently inactive, as the social context with its corresponding norms are very different from other social contexts I normally encounter.
There have been a bunch of people who would be able to follow me,
but most folk seem to react almost offended.
Don't know if it has to do with an inferiority complex on their behalf.
But, i don't use uncommon vocabulary to make myself feel superior.
At first i tried to adapt my speech to common man language,
but it really is a pain, because you have to unravel the precise vocabulary you would normally use and break it down, so that even a five year old could understand it.
As you can imagine, this is very exhausting.
So, i gradually developed frustration induced mutism.
I'm not too happy with that condition either...