I may be overworked, but I am not lost for words:
Inocciduous (adj): of a star, never setting. From Latin occiduus, from. occido (“to go down”). c. 1658
Jungible (adj): that may be joined. From the Latin iungō (“join, yoke”, verb), + -ible (“able to”). c. 1656
Kalotypography (n): beautiful printing. From the Ancient Greek καλϝός (kalwós), from Proto-Indo-European *kal-wo-s, form of *kal- (“beautiful”), + τύπος (túpos) + γραφία (graphía, “mark, impression, image”), variant of γραφή (graphḗ, “writing”). c. 1834
Lubency (n): willingness, pleasure. From Latin lūbricus (“slippery”). c. 1623
Mundivagant (adj): wandering over the wide world. From Latin mundus (“world”) + vagans (“wandering”), p.pr. of vagari. c. 1658
Nubivagant (adj): wandering amongst the clouds. From Latin nubes (“cloud”) + vagant- (“wandering”). c. 1656
Obrumpent (adj): breaking, bursting. From the Latin obrumpēre, from ob- (ob-) + rumpēre to break. c. 1656
Penintime (adj): second from innermost. From Latin intimus (“innermost”) perhaps via French intime. c. 1686
Quaeritate (v): to question or inquire. From Latin second-person plural present active imperative of quaeritō, “to ask, demand, or inquire earnestly.” c. 1657 -1657
Rogitate (v): to ask frequently. From Latin rogitātus (“inquired”), past participle of rogitō (“inquire”). c. 1656
Sparsile (adj): of a star not included in any constellation. From the Latin sparsus, “scattered, strewn, sprinkled.” c. 1891
Teliferous (adj): bearing darts or missiles. From the Latin telifer (“dart-bearing) (telum [“dart”] + ferous [“bearing/carrying”]). c. 1658
Utible (adj): serviceable; useful. From the Latin ūtibilis, from ūtor “to use, employ.” c. 1623
Venialia (n): minor sins or offenses. From the Latin venia (“forgiveness”) + -ālis (suffixed to nouns or numerals creating adjectives of relationship.) c. 1654
Welmish (adj): of a pale or sickly color. Possibly from Middle English whelmen (“to turn over, capsize; to invert, turn upside down”). c. 1688
Xenization (n): The borrowing and integration of foreign linguistic elements into a language; the process of integrating an organism into an environment containing other types of organisms; the act of spending time in a foreign culture. From Ancient Greek ξένος (xénos, “alien”) + -ize + -ation. c. 1818
Yelve (n): dung-fork; garden-fork; to use such a fork. From the Anglo-Saxon. c. 1000
Zygostatical (adj): relating to a market official in charge of official weights. From Ancient Greek ζυγόν (zugón, “yoke”) + New Latin statisticum (“of the state”). c. 1623