Most of the words mentioned so far are technology-related. What about some other words? When was the last time you heard of a parent "scolding" a child? Or a person with old-fashioned tastes and values described as "square"? ("Square" in the sense of "honest, trustworthy" is even older.)
dial (what you used to do to make a phone call)
I know plenty of people who still speak of "dialing" a phone number, even though phones haven't had rotary dials for 40 years.
Wireless.
30 or 40 years ago, a wireless was a radio.
In the UK. "Wireless" is, or was, a mainly British usage.
Hell, I know people who still call remote controls for TVs "clickers" and I suspect when we're all using electric cars . . .
NEVER!! They can have my stick-shift Ford Focus when they pry it from my cold, dead hands!
. . . I think someone already mentioned Landlines. As long as they exist and as long as the cordless phone exists, that word will exist.
The use of the term "landline" to describe hard-wired telephone service is fairly recent, isn't it? Before cellphones became common, we didn't need a special term like "landline" because ALL phones were landline phones. Just as we didn't speak of "AM radio" before FM broadcasting began. It was just called "radio."
. . . and the garage is always where you take care for it's annual MOT test.
Which we Yanks call a smog check, or getting your car "smogged."
Let me focus upon the word rape. Correct me if I am wrong but I guess it it used as synonym for defeat. I have two problems with that.
First, rape is horrible and the word we have for it should not have any second meaning because that would inevitably change the way we perceive real rape.
Second, using it for something trivial is an insult to rape victims just like the other way around,
Murder is horrible also. If a nightclub comic gets a lot of laughs and says, "I really killed 'em tonight," is he insulting murder victims? It's all about context.
Pejorative
Amalgamation - in language where "Portmanteau" has become the popular standard
Palatable
Estranged
Habitual
Anorak - in reference to a geek, or even the jacket!
Stalwart - in reference to a person long associated with an institution
Crony
Jezebel
Except for "anorak" (a word I'm only vaguely familiar with), all the words you listed are quite common -- maybe not in the average conversation on the street, but certainly in literature and journalism.
When Virgos are around 13, their schoolmates' jokes write themselves.
"This is Sweet Sue saying good night, reminding all you daddies out there that every girl in my band is a virtuoso. And I intend to keep it that way."