1. dawamesc (also Dawamesk) — greenish edible paste or marmalade consisting of hashish mixed with butter, sugar or honey, pistachios, cinnamon and other spices, musk, nutmeg, pine nuts, orange juice
Perhaps the Algerian dawamesc was the first introduction into Europe of cannabis edibles, being served in 1844 at the Club des Hashischins in Paris.
2. leather gun — early light cannon of the 1640s & 1650s, where toughened leather wrappings were placed around the more portable smaller barrel in an attempt to give it stability
Gustavus Adolphus hoped that his leather guns would give him an edge over his opponents, but the experiment proved a failure as the guns usually could not fire even a dozen shells before bursting.
3. Krishnacore — musical subgenre mixing hardcore punk with Krishna Consciousness
Naturally straight edge musicians are most often associated with the rise of Krishnacore, but Poly Styrene’s became a follower of the Hare Krishna movement as early as 1983.
4. swizz — [British informal] to be disappointed, to be cheated
So I finally pushed through the crowd and found my seat, and of course—swizzed again!—it was directly behind a I-beam pillar supporting the upper deck.
5. smellfungus — [archaic] one who finds faults, grumbler
It’s all well and good to sigh and say that she’s just an inveterate smellfungus but that does nothing to make her lengthy visits less interminable nor less intolerable.
6. picaresque — of or related to rogues and their adventures; of Spanish satire dating from 16th Century depicting such rogues and such adventure
George Plimpton famously identified Pynchon’s first novel V. as a picaresque story of heroes living outside of normal society, and indeed almost all of the notoriously reclusive author’s works might be so described.
7. biandry — the state of having two husbands at the same time
Since she was not technically a bigamist, there was some question whether she could be charged at all, or whether biandry was even a crime in this state.
8. churl — boor; [archaic] freeman of lowest status under feudalism; [archaic] peasant
I had expected Bronson to be upset, but I didn’t think he’d be such a churl as to barricade the gates to the farm.
9. rubato — [music] expressive phrasing of music by use of non-strict tempo, often by slight speeding up of tempo followed by slowing to the original beat
In “Kind Of Blue” Paul Chamber’s bass keeps a strict tempo which allows the other musicians to employ rubato in their solos, which tension gives the piece part of its power.
10. triblet — conical tapering shaft used for adjusting size of metal objects such as rings
If you don’t know your ring size I can just pop your gold band on my marked triblet and we can find out right quick.
Bonus Vocabulary
(English idiom)
round Robin Hood’s barn — by a circuitous route, in a roundabout manner
So I thought, why ask my lawyer to talk to his lawyer to inquire about the best means of determining et cetera and so forth, when instead of such shilly-shallying and going round Robin Hood’s barn I could just pick up the phone and directly ask the man himself?