How about another obscure double-vowel word — oe. There seem to be a few definitions for this one, all of which have an Anglo-Saxon flavour to them. The definition most familiar to Scrabble players is that the oe is a violent whirlwind that occurs off the Faroe Islands. For those of you not familiar, the Faroes are a small group of islands to the Northeast of Scotland, roughly equidistant between it and Iceland.
The other definition I found is an archaic Scottish term for an illegitimate grandchild. And I also found reference to it as an alternate spelling (Scottish again) for oy, an expression of pain, despair or annoyance.
Don’t forget that you can put an -s at the end of this one, for those instances when there are multiple whirlwinds off the Faroe islands. It happens.
Lets use all three definitions in a sentence, shall we?
“Oe! My oe died in the oe, and I am thus too saddened to eat this haggis.”