## Absquatulate
'Absquatulate' is one of the most exuberant survivals of a distinctly American linguistic tradition: the deliberate fabrication of mock-Latinate words designed to sound learned while being, by intent, completely ridiculous.
## Origin and Formation
The word appears to have been coined sometime around 1830, with the earliest known citation traceable to an Indiana newspaper. It is not, despite appearances, a Latin word — no Roman ever absquatulated anywhere. It is a jocular confection built from three components:
- **ab-** — a genuine Latin prefix meaning 'away from' - **squat** — a plain English verb, meaning to crouch or settle - **-ulate** — a Latin-flavoured suffix, borrowed from words like 'calculate' and 'articulate'
The result is a word that *sounds* like it belongs in a legal document or a physician's report but means nothing more than 'to leave hurriedly' or 'to decamp'. That gap between the word's grandiose form and its mundane meaning is precisely the joke.
## The Tall Talk Tradition
Absquatulate did not arrive alone. It belongs to a recognisable family of American coinages from the 1830s and 1840s, a period sometimes called the age of 'tall talk' — the extravagant, mock-heroic vernacular of the American frontier.
Tall talk was the linguistic register of the backwoodsman who claimed to be 'half horse, half alligator'. It thrived in almanacs, newspapers, and the stump speeches of Jacksonian America, and it produced a remarkable cluster of deliberately absurd words:
- **discombobulate** — to confuse or disconcert (dis- + invented stem + -ate) - **hornswoggle** — to cheat or deceive - **sockdolager** — a decisive blow, or anything conclusive - **rambunctious** — boisterous, unruly - **obfusticate** — to confuse (a mock-learned variant of 'obfuscate') - **splendiferous** — splendid, magnificent (an elaboration of 'splendid')
These words share a common logic: they take something simple and inflate it to absurd proportions, dressing ordinary ideas in the costume of classical learning.
## Jacksonian Democracy and Anti-Elitist Humour
The timing is not accidental. The 1830s were the height of Jacksonian populism — a political and cultural moment defined by suspicion of educated elites, celebration of the common man, and a democratic pride in plain American identity.
Mock-Latin coinages were, in this context, a form of satire. To absquatulate rather than 'depart' was to puncture the pretensions of the educated classes by appropriating their vocabulary and making it deliberately silly. The frontier humorist did not lack words; he had too many, and he deployed them with theatrical excess.
Mark Twain, arguably the greatest chronicler of this tradition, understood the comic power of register collision — the juxtaposition of frontier directness with mock-scholarly inflation. His characters reach for the grandest words available precisely when simplicity would serve better, and the effect is both satirical and affectionate.
### The Democracy of Invention
What distinguishes the tall talk tradition from mere slang is its self-consciousness. These words were not mistakes or corruptions — they were deliberate performances. The speaker knew the word was invented, the audience knew it, and the shared knowingness was part of the pleasure. Inventing a convincing mock-Latin word required a genuine ear for Latin morphology, even among people who had never studied Latin formally. It was linguistic creativity disguised as buffoonery.
## Survival
Most slang does not survive 200 years. 'Absquatulate' has, and the reason is probably phonological as much as semantic. The word is deeply satisfying to say: four syllables, the stress landing firmly on the second, the hard 'qu' and the liquid 'l' giving it a momentum that matches its meaning. 'Leave' is efficient; 'absquatulate' is an event.
The word also benefits from its absurdity being completely transparent. Nobody learns 'absquatulate' and believes it is a serious term. It is adopted precisely *because* it is preposterous — which gives it a kind of social utility that neutral synonyms lack. To absquatulate is to leave with a certain theatrical flair, in a way that acknowledges the comedy of departure.
## Legacy
The mock-Latin tradition of the 1830s left a permanent mark on American English. Several of its coinages have crossed into general usage so thoroughly that their invented origins are forgotten — 'rambunctious' and 'discombobulate' are now standard dictionary entries, their frontier origins invisible beneath layers of respectable use.
'Absquatulate' has taken a different path: it remains conspicuously absurd, valued for its strangeness rather than despite it. It is a word that carries its own history on its face — the history of a democratic, irreverent, inventive culture that found high comedy in the gap between how people talked and how the educated *thought* people should talk.