Pronunciation: \’me-g& - gal - ‘tas-tik\
Function: adjective
Etymology: mega- gal- ‘tast -ik
characterized as having an extensive vocabulary
Fauxcabulary Origin: Learned on The Show with Ze Frank. First used in Gal’s basement in 2005, but the Oxford English Dictionary requires five published instances and for the word to exist for at least five years before it is officially added to the dictionary.
Variant(s): \&-’pä-k&-ä-li-t&-r&-/"chur, -"ch&r, -"tyur, -"tur/\
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English, revelation, Revelation, from Anglo-French apocalipse, from Late Latin apocalypsis, from Greek apokalypsis, from apokalyptein to uncover, from apo- + kalyptein to cover, with Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin litteratura writing, grammar, learning, from litteratus
: literature of or pertaining to the apocalypse
Fauxcabulary Origin: found in the June 23, 2002 Time magazine article “The Bible & The Apocalyse” by Nancy Gibbs while researching the increasingly loud buzz of the Apocalypse.