Every syllable here is new terrain — unfamiliar, specific, built from the choked phonics of the now.
Blenture noun
A sterilized, branded adventure designed for passive consumption.
Usage: “The company’s latest blenture involves ziplining over a simulated war zone.”
Bruct noun
An agreement maintained only through coercion or fear.
Usage: “Their ceasefire was a bruct—silent, bitter, and brittle.”
Clanture noun
Cultural identity policed through exclusion and performance.
Usage: “Wearing the wrong shoes was enough to get you exiled from the clanture.”
Dritch noun
A moral residue left behind by complicity or silence.
Usage: “She scrubbed the floor, but the dritch remained.”
Droque noun
Pleasure mechanisms repurposed to dull existential despair.
Usage: “He took another hit of droque and scrolled into numbness.”
Frillix noun
A flourish of empty complexity used to distract or impress.
Usage: “The app’s interface was all frillix and no function.”
Frawnt verb
To present hollow pride with aggressive confidence.
Usage: “He frawnted about their freedom while building the new wall.”
Gludge noun
A viscous mixture of celebration and rot, often found in corporate branding.
Usage: “The holiday campaign was pure gludge: smiling faces over supply chain collapse.”
Granch verb
To harm one’s kin or cohort in pursuit of advancement.
Usage: “She granch’d her mentor to get that promotion.”
Heckture noun
An architectural structure designed to impose chaos beneath a facade of order.
Usage: “The mall was a heckture: sterile corridors masking disorientation.”
Jaskure noun
The ritualistic appearance of justice, devoid of substance.
Usage: “The hearing was pure jaskure — sentences decided before entry.”
Krimble verb
To smile obediently while enduring exploitation.
Usage: “He krimbled through the exit interview, severance slip in hand.”
Marnish adjective
Relating to manufactured masculinity reinforced by systemic power.
Usage: “The campaign’s tone was unmistakably marnish — grit, guns, and gloss.”
Ozzure noun
Language crafted to soothe while hiding threat; weaponized reassurance.
Usage: “The CEO’s ozzure was flawless — calm tone, lethal content.”
Penth noun
A luxury space elevated through displacement or erasure.
Usage: “Her penth sat twelve stories above the tent city.”
Quantusk noun
The intangible that is lost when all value is reduced to measurement.
Usage: “They could track his heart rate, but not the quantusk behind the silence.”
Scribel verb
To self-censor while appearing expressive.
Usage: “He scribelled his post until only the hashtag remained.”
Stribe noun
A hybrid of ambition and tribalism; collective drive with competitive edge.
Usage: “Startups became stribes — kinship forged through burnout.”
Skreel noun
A digital shriek hidden beneath calm appearances; an emotional overload glitch.
Usage: “Behind her influencer face was a constant skreel.”
Slutch verb
To drag forward under the weight of meaningless tasks.
Usage: “We slutch from one Monday to the next, barely noticing.”
Thoynt noun
A shared thought poisoned by ulterior motive.
Usage: “His tweet was a thoynt — solidarity laced with self-promotion.”
Twarn verb
To warn while simultaneously permitting the danger.
Usage: “The sign twarned us: ‘CAUTION: SYSTEM FAILURE, PROCEED WITH CONFIDENCE.’”
Vaskul adjective
Hidden beneath function; infrastructural and predatory.
Usage: “The city looked clean, but its design was deeply vaskul.”