Antidisestablishmentarianism
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Antidisestablishmentarianism (listen to British sample , American sample ) is a political position that originated in nineteenth-century Britain, in opposition to proposals to remove the Church of England's status as the state church of Ireland and Wales.
In Ireland the Church of Ireland was disestablished in 1871. In Wales four Church of England dioceses were disestablished in 1920, subsequently becoming the Church in Wales. Antidisestablishmentarian members of the Free Church of Scotland delayed merger with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland in a dispute about the position of the Church of Scotland.
The term has largely fallen into disuse; however, the issue itself is still current (see Act of Settlement 1701).
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[edit] Word length
The word itself is often referenced in English-speaking popular culture due to its unusual length of 28 letters and 12 syllables. It is commonly believed to be the longest word in the English language, excluding coined and technical terms not found in major dictionaries.
Longer words typically have been coined by specific authors in relatively modern times, or are obscure technical names. For example, floccinaucinihilipilification, first used in prose by William Shenstone in 1741, is 29 letters long, but was thought to have been coined as a nonsense word by a single person or small group of students at Eton. It is rumoured that this was intended to mean "to value something at nothing" or to describe a lack of value. Another nonsense word specifically coined to be the 'longest word in the English language' is Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious from the song of the same name in the film Mary Poppins.
Recently, the 2007 edition of Guinness Book of World Records listed "pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" as the longest word in the English language. The medical term is a lung disease, caused by the "inhalation of very fine silica dust from volcanoes." The condition restricts breathing, and is more commonly referred to as "silicosis". This too was a purposely coined word, with the explicit intent of being a long word.[1]
There are even longer words, such as the IUPAC name of the protein titin, which has no fewer than 189,819 letters, but this is not technically considered a word, since it is basically thousands of smaller words put together.
[edit] In media
- The word is uttered by Edmund Blackadder in the Dish and Dishonesty episode of Blackadder III. Blackadder said "I'll be back before you can say "Antidisestablishmentarianism"." to the Prince Regent. Consequently, the Prince was struggling to say the word. He only thought he had got it right after two days, before saying "...Okay! Antidistinctlyminty...". As he was in the middle of saying it, Blackadder returned. Epic Fail!
- This word was used in a Phineas and Ferb episode.
- The word was also used in a Dairy Queen commercial.
- The word was used in an episode of Horrible Histories. The teacher in a Victorian school was whipping a boy for failing to spell the word.
[edit] References
[edit] Bibliography
- Adrian Hastings, Church and state : the English experience (Exeter : University of Exeter Press, 1991.)
- Antidisestablishmentarianism in the Online Etymology Dictionary
[edit] Notes
- ^ Cole, Chris (1999). Wordplay, A Curious Dictionary of Language Oddities. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc.. pp. pp. 106 - 107. ISBN 0-8069-1797-0.

