Semaphorism

Semaphorism

n.
a conversational hint that you have something personal to say on the subject but don’t go any further—an emphatic nod, a half-told anecdote, an enigmatic “I know the feeling”—which you place into conversations like those little flags that warn diggers of something buried underground: an unexploded bomb, a sacred burial ground, or a high-voltage cable that secretly powers your house.

From semaphore, a communication method used at sea, in which sailors stand on deck and move flags into certain positions to convey simple messages. Pronounced “sem-uh-fawr-iz-uhm.”

Ecstatic Shock

Immerensis

Lackout

Soufrise

Attriage

Redesis

Antiophobia

Hickering

Sitheless

Dolonia

Dolorblindness

Querinous

Flashover

Fensiveness

Fawtle

Nachlophobia

Feresy

Los Vidados

Echthesia

blurry image of two clocks

Hailbound

Ledsome

Latigo

aerial view of a city at night

Poggled

a person studying a book with a magnifying glass

Symptomania

On Tenderhooks

Mornden

Dystoria

close up of water drops on a window