Danielle McCarthy

Books

The Japanese word for people who own more books than they can read

The Japanese word for people who own more books than they can read

Book lovers and hoarders – it’s a bad combination. At least, it was – but we’ve stumbled upon a Japanese word that makes us book hoarders feel a little less guilty.

The practice is so widespread that our friends in the Land of the Rising Sun have a little portmanteau to describe us – tsundoku, a combination of “tsunde” (“to stack things”), “oku” (“to leave for a while”) and doku (“to read”). All together, according to Oxford Dictionaries, it’s defined as, “the act of leaving a book unread after buying it, typically piling it up together with other such unread books.”

The word’s closest English relative would have to be “bibliomania”, a term coined in the 1800s to describe a fictional “neurosis” which causes sufferers to obsessively collect books. Sound familiar?

These are just two words we think deserve to enter the general lexicon, but as it turns out, there’s a whole lot more out there for us bookworms. Here are some of our favourites:

1. Colophon – The word might not sound familiar, but what it describes will. A “colophon” is the emblem or imprint found on the title page or spine of the book used by publishers to help build loyalty to their brand.

2. Biblotaph – A “biblotaph” is someone who buries their books – especially those the ones they admire – in order to protect them from “bibliolklepts” (book thieves).

3. Princeps – A “princeps” is simply a first edition or first printing of a book. Princeps can be exceedingly valuable – something as recent as the first Harry Potter novel may be worth tens of thousands of dollars.

4. Bibliognost – If a bookworm is someone who loves books, a bibliognost takes it one step further. Not only do they love books, but they seem to know everything about them.

5. Librocubicultarist – Do you like to read in book? You’re a librocubicultarist. The word comes from the Latin “liber,” meaning “book,” and cubiculum, meaning “sleeping chamber”.

6. Scripturient – This word has died out over the years, but it essentially means “author”. While the latter may be easier to day, “scripturient” sounds a lot fancier!

Are you guilty of “tsundoku”? How many unread books are still on your shelf? Let us know in the comment section below. 

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