I was today years old when I learned it was OBFUSCATE (aub-fuss-kate) and OBFUSTICATE (aub-foos-ti-kate).
But actually!!!
Fun stuff, both are legitimate words. It's just the one that I've always used is not the common term, it's the archaic.
@LianaBrooks I thought obfusticate was slightly different, and was when you deliberately made text or speech burdensome to the reader or listner in order to distract or hide meaning. To obfuscate by making something boring or difficult to absorb.
@AskTheDevil Mmm. Interesting. The dictionary I checked had them listed as the same word, with obfuscate being the more common variant.
@LianaBrooks Oh, I didn't say that's what's real, just that I _thought_ they were different.
@AskTheDevil I hadn't even heard Obfuscate until yesterday.
@AskTheDevil I love using archaic language that my kids pick up and then use to the bewilderment of teachers.
"Your child keeps calling the day after tomorrow 'overmorrow' and we don't know why."
"Overmorrow literally mean The Day After Tomorrow."
o.o
@LianaBrooks I liked to confuses managers by using "sennight" (a week).
@AskTheDevil That's an excellent word.
@AskTheDevil It's even more fun when they mix languages.
Kaja in Korean means "Let's Go". It's already a verb. But Youngest will steal it and add the English verb ending so she says, "I'm kajaing."