A former colleague at the university asked if I would proof a paper he had written before he sent it to an academic journal. That’s part of what I did for a living for many years, before retirement, and he knows I'm fast and reliable. It felt like giving an old friend a modest gift. I found a few typos and questioned one of his citations but best of all I encountered the word in the English language I most enjoy pronouncing: molybdenum (Mo, atomic number 42).
My fondness has nothing to do with molybdenum’s chemical properties or its use in military armor, aircraft parts, electrical contacts and industrial motors. I just love saying that double iamb. It sounds like the quintessential mumble. I would have loved to hear Marlon Brando saying the word, which is rooted in scientific Latin. Other nominees for the title Most Euphonious Word in the Language: scrim, adamantine, limbeck, epanalepsis, atrorubent, Precambrian, scofflaw, ball-peen, Guelph, rawky . . .
Jules Renard writes in a
February 1888 entry in his Journal 1887-1910 (trans. Theo Cuffe,
selected and introduced by Julian Barnes, riverrun, 2020): “A word so delicious
that one wishes it had cheeks, so as to kiss them.”