O’Erpine

a person looking at a grave

O’Erpine

v. intr.
to wander through the grounds of a cemetery, glancing over the gravestones as if you were people-watching the dead, imagining all the things they must have seen and the lives they might have led, trying to conjure up an entire biography from a handful of words and dates etched in granite, with barely more than a single dash to cover the unimaginable vastness of their experience.

From over, finished and done with + pine, to yearn or grieve for something. Compare the flowering perennial orpine, also called autumn joy or live-forevers, which is often found in open sunny areas of cemeteries. Pronounced “awr-pahyn.”

Lap Year

several people racing bicycles uphill in a forest

Tirosy

a close-up of a young child's face

Énouement

a hand opening a curtain

Mithenness

a person standing on the side of a road

Anticious

a group of men in hats looking at elevated signage

Appriesse

a blurry image of a person looking at mounted images

Lisolia

a bookcase containing objects

Echthesia

blurry image of two clocks

Keta

a hand reaching through paper with a flower drawing

Cullaways

a lone sand castle on a beach at low tide

Nowlings

a pile of black and white puzzle pieces

Daguerreologue

Daguer-reologue

a man sitting in blurred silhouette at a desk

Inerrata

a hand holding a broken cup

Kerisl

piles of old books scattered in an abandoned room

Walloway

water faucet that seems to emanate from the ground

Halfwise

a train coming towards the camera shot from the tracks

Present-Tense

a close-up of a stopwatch

Keir

a snowy landscape with trees and a fence

Nodrophobia

close-up of a stained shirt

Amentalio

a person in a white dress, facing away

Rubatosis

Boorance

a group of objects on a table

Hanker Sore

Ne’er-Be-Gone

Attriage

Ironsick

a group of random devices

Wenbane

a person standing on a ledge looking at a city skyline