I (very) recently did a theme week on lost positives (or not); since it's not inapt, I'll post some here.

the worthless word for the day is: sheveled

[by shortening] (also shevelled)
rare, archaic disheveled

"He bowed his tall white head into my shevelled hair."
- Richard Blackmore, Erema (1877)

"After the prisoner was delivered to Lexington the
next day in sheveled and humbled state, the posse was
dismissed..."
- Reese Prescott; The Rockbridge County Gazette, June 28, 1904

(but)
"She was a descript person, a woman in a state of
total array. Her hair was kempt, her clothing shevelled,
and she moved in a gainly way."
- Jack Winter; The New Yorker, 25 July 1994

"Is sheveled the opposite of disheveled? Recreational
linguists call these words lost positives."
- Charles Elster, What in the Word? (2005)
___

you never know how a prefix is going to affect things;
some expect that sheveled existed as a positive form
(as happened with couth and kempt), but in this case
the word was formed (as per OED) by aphesis. link

Last edited by tsuwm; 05/04/09 08:50 PM.