Selection
Words are selected for usefulness as well as novelty.
Entries are chosen because they do something distinctive in English: strong tone, memorable sound, comic force, historical color, or unusually precise meaning.
Editorial policy
This page explains how Absurd Words chooses entries, writes definitions, handles examples, approaches historical claims, and updates the archive over time. The aim is practical trust: enough transparency to help readers understand how the site is making editorial decisions without pretending every odd word has one perfect answer.
Selection
Entries are chosen because they do something distinctive in English: strong tone, memorable sound, comic force, historical color, or unusually precise meaning.
Definitions
Each word page aims to answer the likely search intent early, then move into plain-English explanation, tone, examples, and related vocabulary.
Examples
Example sentences are written to reveal register, tone, and likely context rather than serving as empty placeholders that could fit any word.
History
If a word’s origin or development is uncertain, the site prefers careful wording over overconfident storytelling. Selective source links are added only when they genuinely help a historical or etymological claim.
Updates
Updates may refine definitions, improve examples, tighten metadata, strengthen internal links, clarify tone, or add FAQ content that better reflects how readers are actually searching. Word pages now carry an editorial note and visible update date so the maintenance process is not hidden.
Category pages, letter pages, hubs, and tools are also revised when the archive needs cleaner navigation or stronger topical focus. For more on site structure, see the methodology page. For the broader site mission, see the About page.