Longest word in English explained

The identity of the longest word in English depends on the definition of a word and of length.

Words may be derived naturally from the language's roots or formed by coinage and construction. Additionally, comparisons are complicated because place names may be considered words, technical terms may be arbitrarily long, and the addition of suffixes and prefixes may extend the length of words to create grammatically correct but unused or novel words. Different dictionaries include and omit different words.

The length of a word may also be understood in multiple ways. Most commonly, length is based on orthography (conventional spelling rules) and counting the number of written letters. Alternate, but less common, approaches include phonology (the spoken language) and the number of phonemes (sounds).

Word LettersMeaningClaim Dispute
189,819The chemical composition of titin, the largest known proteinLongest known word overall by magnitudes. Attempts to say the entire word have taken two[1] to three and a half hours.[2] Technical; not in dictionary; whether this should actually be considered a word is disputed
1,909The chemical name of E. coli TrpA Longest published word[3] Technical
183A fictional dish of foodLongest word coined by a major author,[4] the longest word ever to appear in literature[5] Contrived nonce word; not in dictionary; Ancient Greek transliteration
45The disease silicosisLongest word in a major dictionaryContrived coinage to make it the longest word; technical, but only mentioned and never actually used in communication
34Unclear – generally understood as a positive adjective or a nonsense wordMade popular in the Mary Poppins film and musical[6] Contrived coinage
30A hereditary medical disorderLongest non-contrived word in a major dictionary[7] Technical
28The political position of opposing disestablishmentLongest non-contrived and nontechnical word[8] Not all dictionaries accept it due to lack of usage.[9]
27The state of being able to achieve honorsLongest word in Shakespeare's works; longest word in the English language featuring alternating consonants and vowels[10] Latin

Major dictionaries

The longest word in any of the major English language dictionaries is pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (45 letters), a word that refers to a lung disease contracted from the inhalation of very fine silica particles,[11] specifically from a volcano; medically, it is the same as silicosis. The word was deliberately coined to be the longest word in English,[12] and has since been used in a close approximation of its originally intended meaning, lending at least some degree of validity to its claim.

The Oxford English Dictionary contains pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism (30 letters).

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary does not contain antidisestablishmentarianism (28 letters), as the editors found no widespread, sustained usage of the word in its original meaning. The longest word in that dictionary is electroencephalographically (27 letters).[13]

The longest non-technical word in major dictionaries is floccinaucinihilipilification at 29 letters. Consisting of a series of Latin words meaning "nothing" and defined as "the act of estimating something as worthless"; its usage has been recorded as far back as 1741.[14] [15] [16]

Ross Eckler has noted that most of the longest English words are not likely to occur in general text, meaning non-technical present-day text seen by casual readers, in which the author did not specifically intend to use an unusually long word. According to Eckler, the longest words likely to be encountered in general text are deinstitutionalization and counterrevolutionaries, with 22 letters each.[17]

A computer study of over a million samples of normal English prose found that the longest word one is likely to encounter on an everyday basis is uncharacteristically, at 20 letters.[18]

Creations of long words

Coinages

In his play Assemblywomen (Ecclesiazousae), the ancient Greek comedic playwright Aristophanes created a word of 171 letters (183 in the transliteration below), which describes a dish by stringing together its ingredients:

Lopadotemachoselachogaleokranioleipsanodrimhypotrimmatosilphiokarabomelitokatakechymenokichlepikossyphophattoperisteralektryonoptekephalliokigklopeleiolagoiosiraiobaphetraganopterygon.

Henry Carey's farce Chrononhotonthologos (1743) holds the opening line: "Aldiborontiphoscophornio! Where left you Chrononhotonthologos?"

Thomas Love Peacock put these creations into the mouth of the phrenologist Mr. Cranium in his 1816 book Headlong Hall: osteosarchaematosplanchnochondroneuromuelous (44 characters) and osseocarnisanguineoviscericartilaginonervomedullary (51 characters).

James Joyce made up nine 100-letter words plus one 101-letter word in his novel Finnegans Wake, the most famous of which is Bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkonnbronntonnerronntuonnthunntrovarrhounawnskawntoohoohoordenenthurnuk. Appearing on the first page, it allegedly represents the symbolic thunderclap associated with the fall of Adam and Eve. As it appears nowhere else except in reference to this passage, it is generally not accepted as a real word. Sylvia Plath made mention of it in her semi-autobiographical novel The Bell Jar, when the protagonist was reading Finnegans Wake.

"Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious", the 34-letter title of a song from the movie Mary Poppins, does appear in several dictionaries, but only as a proper noun defined in reference to the song title. The attributed meaning is "a word that you say when you don't know what to say." The idea and invention of the word is credited to songwriters Robert and Richard Sherman.

Agglutinative constructions

The English language permits the legitimate extension of existing words to serve new purposes by the addition of prefixes and suffixes. This is sometimes referred to as agglutinative construction. This process can create arbitrarily long words: for example, the prefixes pseudo (false, spurious) and anti (against, opposed to) can be added as many times as desired. More familiarly, the addition of numerous "great"s to a relative, such as "great-great-great-great-grandparent", can produce words of arbitrary length. In musical notation, an 8192nd note may be called a .

Antidisestablishmentarianism is the longest common example of a word formed by agglutinative construction.

Technical terms

A number of scientific naming schemes can be used to generate arbitrarily long words.

The IUPAC nomenclature for organic chemical compounds is open-ended, giving rise to the 189,819-letter chemical name Methionylthreonylleucine for the protein also known as titin, which is involved in striated muscle formation. In nature, DNA molecules can be much bigger than protein molecules and therefore potentially be referred to with much longer chemical names. For example, the wheat chromosome 3B contains almost 1 billion base pairs,[19] so the sequence of one of its strands, if written out in full like Adenilyladenilylguanilylcystidyl, would be about 8billion letters long. The longest published word, Acetylseryltyrosylseryl, referring to the coat protein of a certain strain of tobacco mosaic virus, is 1,185 letters long, and appeared in the American Chemical Society's Chemical Abstracts Service in 1964 and 1966.[20] In 1965, the Chemical Abstracts Service overhauled its naming system and started discouraging excessively long names. In 2011, a dictionary broke this record with a 1909-letter word describing the trpA protein .[3]

John Horton Conway and Landon Curt Noll developed an open-ended system for naming powers of 10, in which one , coming from the Latin name for 6560, is the name for 103(6560+1) = 1019683. Under the long number scale, it would be 106(6560) = 1039360.

is sometimes cited as the longest binomial name—it is a kind of amphipod. However, this name, proposed by B. Dybowski, was invalidated by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature in 1929 after being petitioned by Mary J. Rathbun to take up the case.

Myxococcus llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogochensis is the longest accepted binomial name for an organism. It is a bacterium found in soil collected at Llanfairpwllgwyngyll (discussed below). Parastratiosphecomyia stratiosphecomyioides is the longest accepted binomial name for any animal, or any organism visible with the naked eye. It is a species of soldier fly.[21] The genus name Parapropalaehoplophorus (a fossil glyptodont, an extinct family of mammals related to armadillos) is two letters longer, but does not contain a similarly long species name.

, at 52 letters, describing the spa waters at Bath, England, is attributed to Dr. Edward Strother (1675–1737).[22] The word is composed of the following elements:

Notable long words

Place names

See main article: List of long place names. The longest officially recognized place name in an English-speaking country is (85 letters), which is a hill in New Zealand (see the signpost photo on this page). The name is in the Māori language. There are several variant spellings of the name, including some that are longer. In Māori, the digraphs ng and wh are each treated as single letters.

In Canada, the longest place name is Dysart, Dudley, Harcourt, Guilford, Harburn, Bruton, Havelock, Eyre and Clyde, a township in Ontario, at 61 letters or 68 non-space characters.[24]

The 58-letter name Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch is the name of a town on Anglesey, an island of Wales. In terms of the traditional Welsh alphabet, the name is only 51 letters long, as certain digraphs in Welsh are considered as single letters, for instance ll, ng and ch. It is generally agreed, however, that this invented name, adopted in the mid-19th century, was contrived solely to be the longest name of any town in Britain. The official name of the place is Llanfairpwllgwyngyll, commonly abbreviated to Llanfairpwll or Llanfair PG.

The longest non-contrived place name in the United Kingdom which is a single non-hyphenated word is Cottonshopeburnfoot (19 letters) and the longest which is hyphenated is Sutton-under-Whitestonecliffe (29 characters).

The longest place name in the United States (45 letters) is , a lake in Webster, Massachusetts. It means "Fishing Place at the Boundaries – Neutral Meeting Grounds" and is sometimes facetiously translated as "you fish your side of the water, I fish my side of the water, nobody fishes the middle". The lake is also known as Webster Lake.[25] The longest hyphenated names in the U.S. are Winchester-on-the-Severn, a town in Maryland, and Washington-on-the-Brazos, a notable place in Texas history. The longest single-word town names in the U.S. are Kleinfeltersville, Pennsylvania and Mooselookmeguntic, Maine.

The longest official geographical name in Australia is .[26] It has 26 letters and is a Pitjantjatjara word meaning "where the Devil urinates".[27]

Liechtenstein is the longest single-word country name in English, and the second-longest is Turkmenistan.

See also: List of short place names.

Personal names

Guinness World Records formerly contained a category for longest personal name used.

Long birth names are often coined in protest of naming laws or for other personal reasons.

Words with certain characteristics of notable length

See main article: List of the longest English words with one syllable.

Typed words

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Reading The Longest English Word (190,000 Characters) . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211110/IZVbzNRUlQI. 2021-11-10 . live. YouTube . 2 June 2017 . 2 August 2020.
  2. Web site: World's longest word takes 3.5 hours to pronounce. 2012-12-08. CW39 Houston. en-US. 2020-05-18. 2020-05-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20200527051837/https://cw39.com/newsfix/worlds-longest-word-takes-3-5-hours-to-pronounce/. dead.
  3. Book: Moore . A Student's Dictionary & Gazetteer . 1 January 2006 . . 978-0-9771777-5-2 . 11th . . 524 . registration.
  4. see separate article Lopado...pterygon
  5. Book: Donald McFarlan. Norris Dewar McWhirter . David A. Boeh . Guinness book of world records: 1990. registration. 1989. Sterling. 978-0-8069-5790-6. 129 .
  6. Web site: Merriam Webster: Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.
  7. Web site: What is the longest English word? . AskOxford . 2010-08-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081022192048/http://www.askoxford.com/asktheexperts/faq/aboutwords/longestword . 2008-10-22 . dead .
  8. Web site: What is the longest English word?. oxforddictionaries.com.
  9. Web site: Merriam Webster: "Antidisestablishmentarianism is not in the dictionary.".
  10. http://www.innocentenglish.com/cool-interesting-and-strange-facts/cool-strange-and-interesting-facts-page-3-3.html "Cool, Strange, and Interesting Facts,"
  11. Web site: pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis – definition of pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis in English from the Oxford dictionary. oxforddictionaries.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120719114141/http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis#m_en_gb0642240. 2012-07-19.
  12. Coined around 1935 to be the longest word; press reports on puzzle league members legitimized it somewhat. First appeared in the MWNID supplement, 1939. Today OED and several others list it, but citations are almost always as "longest word". More detail at pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.
  13. Web site: The Longest Word in the Dictionary. Ask the Editor. Merriam-Webster. 14 November 2013. Video. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20131121212903/http://www.merriam-webster.com/video/0048-longest_word_in_dictionary.htm. 21 November 2013.
  14. http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-flo2.htm "Floccinaucinihilipilification" by Michael Quinion World Wide Words
  15. The Guinness Book of Records, in its 1992 and previous editions, declared the longest real word in the English language to be floccinaucinihilipilification. More recent editions of the book have acknowledged pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis. What is the longest English word? - Oxford Dictionaries Online
  16. In recent times its usage has been recorded in the proceedings of the United States Senate by Senator Robert Byrd Discussion between Sen. Moynihan and Sen. Byrd "Mr. President, may I say to the distinguished Senator from New York, I used that word on the Senate floor myself 2 or 3 years ago. I cannot remember just when or what the occasion was, but I used it on that occasion to indicate that whatever it was I was discussing it was something like a mere trifle or nothing really being of moment." Congressional Record June 17, 1991, p. S7887, and at the White House by Bill Clinton's press secretary Mike McCurry, albeit sarcastically. December 6, 1995, White House Press Briefing in discussing Congressional Budget Office estimates and assumptions: "But if you – as a practical matter of estimating the economy, the difference is not great. There's a little bit of floccinaucinihilipilification going on here."
  17. Eckler, R. Making the Alphabet Dance, p 252, 1996.
  18. Web site: Longest Common Words – Modern . Maltron.com . 2010-08-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090427054251/http://www.maltron.com/words/words-longest-modern.html . 27 April 2009 .
  19. Paux et al. (2008) Science, Vol. 322 (5898) 101–104. A Physical Map of the 1-Gigabase Bread Wheat Chromosome 3B A Physical Map of the 1-Gigabase Bread Wheat Chromosome 3B . 10.1126/science.1161847 . 2012-12-01 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20150903222353/http://www.sciencemag.org/content/322/5898/101.full . 2015-09-03 . 2008 . Paux . Etienne . Sourdille . Pierre . Salse . Jérôme . Saintenac . Cyrille . Choulet . Frédéric . Leroy . Philippe . Korol . Abraham . Michalak . Monika . Kianian . Shahryar . Spielmeyer . Wolfgang . Lagudah . Evans . Somers . Daryl . Kilian . Andrzej . Alaux . Michael . Vautrin . Sonia . Bergès . Hélène . Eversole . Kellye . Appels . Rudi . Safar . Jan . Simkova . Hana . Dolezel . Jaroslav . Bernard . Michel . Feuillet . Catherine . Science . 322 . 5898 . 101–104 . 18832645 . 2008Sci...322..101P . 27686615 .
  20. Chemical Abstracts Formula Index, Jan.–June 1964, Page 967F; Chemical Abstracts 7th Coll. Formulas, C23H32-Z, 56–65, 1962–1966, Page 6717F
  21. Web site: World's longest name of an animal. Parastratiosphecomyia stratiosphecomyioides Stratiomyid Fly Soldier Fly.. rjk. thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20111117001007/http://www.thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com/long428.html. 2011-11-17. 2011-12-17.
  22. cited in some editions of the Guinness Book of Records as the longest word in English, see Askoxford.com on the longest English word
  23. http://perseus.uchicago.edu/hopper/morph.jsp?l=aequo&la=la
  24. Web site: GeoNames Government of Canada site . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090206201115/http://geonames.nrcan.gc.ca/info/trivia_e.php . 2009-02-06 .
  25. News: What's the Name of That Lake? It's Hard to Say . The New York Times . Pam . Belluck . 2004-11-20.
  26. Web site: Geoscience Australia Gazetteer . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071001005330/http://www.ga.gov.au/bin/gazd01?rec=204304 . 2007-10-01 .
  27. Web site: South Australian State Gazetteer . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071001000850/http://www.placenames.sa.gov.au/pno/pnores.phtml?recno=SA0078626 . 2007-10-01 .
  28. Web site: Guinness Records.
  29. Web site: Longest Word Without Repeating Letters. December 2014.
  30. Web site: Science Links Japan | Two Unique Aftercataracts Requiring Surgical Removal . Sciencelinks.jp . 2009-03-18 . 2010-08-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110217081656/http://sciencelinks.jp/j-east/article/200319/000020031903A0436636.php . 2011-02-17 .
  31. Web site: Typewriter Words . Questrel.com . 2010-08-22 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20100927071605/http://www.questrel.com/records.html#spelling_typewriter_order . 2010-09-27 .
  32. Web site: Dictionary entry for monimolimnion, a word that, at 13 letters, is longer than any of the words linked in the source above. 2009-08-15. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20090909214139/http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-monimolimnion.html?jse=0. 2009-09-09.
  33. Web site: Word Records . Fun-with-words.com . 2012-08-13 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20120826081140/http://www.fun-with-words.com/word_records.html . 2012-08-26 .
  34. Web site: Typewriter Words . Wordnik.com . 2011-01-15 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20110717053017/http://www.wordnik.com/lists/typewriter-words/ . 2011-07-17 .
  35. Web site: The Dvorak Keyboard and You . Theworldofstuff.com . 2010-08-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100820154431/http://www.theworldofstuff.com/dvorak/ . 2010-08-20 .