gramercy means used as an expression of gratitude: thanks; many thanks. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 84 out of 100.
Why this word is great
GRAMERCY — [Interjection] An archaic exclamation of profound gratitude, or, more rarely, of startled acknowledgment. From Middle English gramerci, from Old French grant merci ("great thanks"), from grant ("great") and merci ("mercy, thanks"). Unlike the transactional brevity of "thanks"—a modern utility—or the neutral affirmation of "indeed"—a bare acknowledgment of fact—gramercy is gratitude rendered as feudal ceremony, a coin from a deeper linguistic mint. It is the breathless word of a knight spared by a foe’s mercy, the murmured benediction over a shared loaf in a pilgrim’s hostel, or the soft cry of a scholar finding a long-sought line in a vellum folio—a fossil of feeling preserved in amber, where every boon was a singular grace, making our contemporary gratitude feel faintly impoverished.
intj
- Used as an expression of gratitude: thanks; many thanks.“Gramércy, liegé King, / This is to me a comforting: / I tell you sickerly / For to have land or lede / Or other riches, so God me speed, / It is too much for me.”
- Used as an exclamation expressing surprise or sudden strong feelings.