A while back, British nature writer Robert Macfarlane (who wrote one of my favourite nonfiction books about outdoor adventure Mountains of the Mind) discovered that the latest Oxford Junior Dictionary was missing a few things. Oxford University Press confirmed that a list of words had been removed. These words, the publisher felt, were no longer relevant to a modern-day childhood. So goodbye to acorn, ash, and beech. Farewell to bluebell, buttercup and conker. Adios dandelion, fern, hazel, and heather. And in their place came modern words, such as blog, broadband, chatroom, Facebook, Tik Tok, Twitter and voicemail.
Inspired by the culling Macfarlane set out to counter the trend by creating a glossary of his own. “We lack a Terra Britannica, as it were: a gathering of terms for the land…