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Monday, March 13, 2023

Reappropriation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Monet's Impression, soleil levant was ridiculed as "Impression-ist" in 1872, but the term then became the name of the art movement, "impressionism", and painters began to self-identify as "impressionist"

In linguistics, reappropriation, reclamation, or resignification is the cultural process by which a group reclaims words or artifacts that were previously used in a way disparaging of that group. It is a specific form of a semantic change (i.e. change in a word's meaning). Linguistic reclamation can have wider implications in the fields of discourse and has been described in terms of personal or sociopolitical empowerment.

Characteristics

A reclaimed or reappropriated word is a word that was at one time pejorative but has been brought back into acceptable usage, usually starting within its original target, i.e. the communities that were pejoratively described by that word, and later spreading to the general populace as well. Some of the terms being reclaimed have originated as non-pejorative terms that over time became pejorative. Reclaiming them can be seen as restoring their original intent. This, however, does not apply to all such words as some were used in a derogatory fashion from the very beginning.

In terms of linguistic theory, reappropriation can be seen as a specific case of a type of a semantic change, namely, of amelioration - a process through which a word's meaning becomes more positive over time.

Brontsema suggested that there are at least three identifiable goals of reclamation:

  1. Value reversal
  2. Neutralization 
  3. Stigma exploitation

The value reversal refers to changing the meaning from pejorative to neutral or positive. Neutralization refers to denying the term to those who want to use it, or words in general, to oppress and hurt another group. Stigma exploitation, finally, refers to the use of such terms as a reminder that a given group has been subject to unfair treatment. Those goals can be mutually exclusive; in particular, stigma exploitation is incompatible with the other two goals.

Reclamation can be seen as both a psychological, individual process and as a sociological, society-wide process. In terms of a personal process, it has been discussed in the context of empowerment that comes from "disarming the power of a dominant group to control one’s own and others’ views of oneself", and gaining control over the way one is described, and hence, one's self-image, self-control and self-understanding. Brontsema wrote that "At the heart of linguistic reclamation is the right of self-definition, of forging and naming one’s own existence." Other scholars have connected this concept to that of self-labelling. The empowerment process, and the denial of language as a tool of oppression as abuse of power, has also been stressed by scholars such as Judith Butler and Michel Foucault, the latter who also referred to it as a "reverse discourse".

In terms of the wider sociopolitical empowerment process, reclamation process has also been credited with promoting social justice, and building group solidarity; activists groups that engage in this process have been argued to be more likely to be seen as representative of their groups and see those groups as raising in power and status in their society. Scholars have argued that those who use such terms to describe themselves in the act of reappropriation "will feel powerful and therefore see his or her group label as less stigmatizing. Observers will infer that the group has power and will therefore see the label as less saturated in negativity".

Although those terms are most often used in the context of language, this concept has also been used in relation to other cultural concepts, for example in the discussion of reappropriation of stereotypes, reappropriation of popular culture (e.g., the reappropriation of science fiction literature into elite, high literature), or reappropriation of traditions.

Controversy and objections

Reclaimed words often remain controversial for a time, due to their original pejorative nature. For some terms, even "reclaimed" usage by members of the community concerned is a subject of controversy. Often, not all members of a given community support the idea that a particular slur should be reclaimed at all. In other cases, a word can be seen as acceptable when used by the members of the community that has reclaimed it (in-group usage), but its use by outside parties (out-group usage) can still be seen as derogatory and thus controversial. For example, Brontsema noted in 2003 in his discussion of the reclaimed terms that while "[the term nigger] may be acceptable for [African Americans] to use it freely, it is off-limits to whites, whose usage of nigger cannot be the same, given its history and the general history of racial oppression and racial relations in the United States." Similar argument has been made in 2009 for words associated with the LGBT movement like queer or dyke. A related discourse occurred with regards to the Washington Redskins name controversy, with the American Indians community divided on whether the term has been reclaimed or not.

Those opposed to the reclamation of terms have argued that such terms are irredeemable and are forever connected to their derogatory meaning, and their usage will continue to hurt those who remember its original intent and even reinforce the existing stigma. The supporters of reclamation argue, in turn, that many such words had non-derogatory meanings that are simply being restored and that in either case, reclaiming such a word denies it to those who would want to use it to oppress others and represents a form of moral victory for the group that reclaimed it.

In 2017, the US Supreme Court, heard arguments for Matal v. Tam. In that case, the US Patent and Trademark Office refused a trademark registration for an Asian American band, The Slants, because it deemed the term disparaging. However, the court ruled unanimously in its favor. Washington University in St. Louis conducted an extensive study on reappropriation based on the band name and found that reclaimed words could be an effective tool for neutralizing disparaging words: "Reappropriation does seem to work in the sense of defusing insults, rendering them less disparaging and harmful."

Examples

Sex and sexuality

There are many recent examples of linguistic reappropriation in the areas of human sexuality, gender roles, sexual orientation, etc. Among these are:

Politics

In England, Cavalier was a derogatory nickname reappropriated as self-identification, in contrast to the term Roundhead which, despite being used by the Royalists for the supporters of the Parliamentary cause, remained a derisory word up to the point of it being a punishable offense if used to refer to a soldier of the New Model Army. Tory (originally from the Middle Irish word for 'pursuer' tóraidhe), Whig (from whiggamore; see the Whiggamore Raid) and Suffragette are other British examples.

In the American colonies, British officers used Yankee, a term originated in reference to Dutch settlers, as a derogatory term against the colonists. British officers created the early versions of the song Yankee Doodle, as a criticism of the uncultured colonists, but during the Revolution, as the colonists began to reappropriate the label yankee as a point of pride, they likewise reappropriated the song, altering verses, and turning it into a patriotic anthem. The term is now widely used as an affectionate nickname for Americans in general.

In the 1850s in the United States, a secretive political party was derisively dubbed the Know Nothing party, based on their penchant for saying "I know nothing" when asked for details by outsiders; this became the common name for the party. It eventually became a popular name, sufficiently so that consumer products like tea, candy, and even a freighter were branded with the name.

During the 2016 United States presidential election, Hillary Clinton referred to some Trump supporters as a "Basket of deplorables". Many Trump supporters endorsed the phrase. Donald Trump also played the song "Do You Hear the People Sing?" from the musical Les Misérables as an introduction to one of his rallies, using a graphic captioned "Les Deplorables". Subsequently, Trump called Clinton a "nasty woman" during the final presidential debate, resulting in that expression being described as a "rallying cry" for women. It was soon featured on merchandise and used by Clinton's campaign surrogates.

Religion

One of the older examples of successful reclaiming is the term Jesuit to refer to members of the Society of Jesus. This was originally a derogatory term referring to people who too readily invoked the name of Jesus in their politics, but which members of the Society adopted over time for themselves, so that the word came to refer exclusively to them, and generally in a positive or neutral sense, even though the term "Jesuitical" is derived from the Society of Jesus and is used to mean things like: manipulative, conspiring, treacherous, capable of intellectually justifying anything by convoluted reasoning.

Other examples can be found in the origins of Methodism; early members were originally mocked for their "methodical" and rule-driven religious devotion, founder John Wesley embraced the term for his movement. Members of the Religious Society of Friends were termed Quakers as an epithet, but took up the term themselves. Similarly, the term Protestant was originally a derogatory term, and more recently the term pagan has been subject to a similar change in meaning.

Race, ethnicity, and nationality

To a lesser extent, and more controversially among the groups referred to, many racial, ethnic, and class terms have been reappropriated:

  • Baster, the name is derived from bastaard, the Dutch word for "bastard". They are a Southern African ethnic group descended from White European men and Black African women. The Basters reappropriated it as a "proud name", claiming their ancestry and history.
  • Black, negro, nigga, or nigger by African Americans
  • Curry, used a derogatory term for South Asians (often in conjunction with muncher or slurper), reappropriated by some members of the South Asian expatriate or American-Born Confused Desi community.
  • Jew by the Jewish people (the word used to be seen as pejorative in English). That process is still not complete in some Slavic languages, where the word Zhyd can still be seen as pejorative.
  • Kugel, playful South African English slang for a materialistic young woman, originally was a derogatory term used by the elder generation of South African Jews for a young Jewish woman who forsook traditional Jewish dress values for those of the ostentatiously wealthy and became overly materialistic and overgroomed. The term was then reclaimed by those women.
  • Peckerwood, originally black slang in the Southern United States for poor whites, reclaimed by white prison gangs
  • Smoggie, originally a derogatory term for people from the North East England town of Middlesbrough, in reference to the town's notorious industrial pollution, now commonly used in self-identification.
  • White trash, a classist slur referring to poor white people, reappropriated by some in the Southern states of the United States of America as a cultural symbol and badge of pride - however this reappropriation has not been as evident in mainstream British English syntax where it is used in a more condescending or sarcastic manner.
  • Wog by Australians of Greek, Arab or Turkish descent.

Disability

Art movements

Feminism

Words some feminist activists have argued should be reclaimed include:

Word of the year

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The word(s) of the year, sometimes capitalized as "Word(s) of the Year" and abbreviated "WOTY" (or "WotY"), refers to any of various assessments as to the most important word(s) or expression(s) in the public sphere during a specific year.

The German tradition, Wort des Jahres was started in 1971. The American Dialect Society's Word of the Year is the oldest English-language version, and the only one that is announced after the end of the calendar year, determined by a vote of independent linguists, and not tied to commercial interest. However, various other organizations also announce Words of the Year for a variety of purposes.

American Dialect Society

Since 1990, the American Dialect Society (ADS) has designated one or more words or terms to be the "Word of the Year" in the United States

At the end of each decade, the society also chooses a Word of the Decade: web for the 1990s, google (as a verb) for the 2000s, and singular they for the 2010s. In 2000, jazz was selected as "Word of the 20th Century", and she as "Word of the Past Millennium".

Selection

Other candidates for "Word of the Year" have included:

  • 2006: Plutoed beat "climate canary" (something whose poor health indicates a looming environmental catastrophe) in a run-off vote for the 2006 word of the year. Other words in the running were flog (an advertisement disguised as a blog or web log), The Decider (a political catchphrase said by former United States President George W. Bush), "prohibited liquids" (fluids that cannot be transported by passengers on airplanes), and macaca (an American citizen treated as an alien)
  • 2007: Among the contenders were green- (a designation of environmental concern, as in greenwashing), surge (an increase in troops in a war zone, as in the Iraq War troop surge of 2007), Facebook (all parts of speech), waterboarding (an interrogation technique in which the subject is immobilized and doused with water to simulate drowning), Googlegänger (a portmanteau of Google and Doppelgänger, meaning a person with your name who shows up when you google yourself), and wide stance, "to have a —" (to be hypocritical or to express two conflicting points of view, in reference to Senator Larry Craig after his 2007 arrest at an airport)
  • 2010: Nom lost in a run-off with app
  • 2011: 99%, 99 percenters and the acronym FoMO (fear of missing out) lost in a run-off with occupy
  • 2012: Other nominees were YOLO (an acronym for "You Only Live Once," often used sarcastically or self-deprecatingly), fiscal cliff (the threat of spending cuts and tax increases looming over end-of-year budget negotiations), Gangnam style (the trendy style of Seouls Gangnam District, as used in the Korean pop song of the same name), marriage equality (legal recognition of same-sex marriage), and 47 percent (a claimed portion of the population that does not pay federal income tax).
  • 2013: slash: used as a coordinating conjunction to mean "and/or" (e.g., "come and visit slash stay") or "so" ("I love that place, slash can we go there?"), twerk: A mode of dance that involves vigorous booty-shaking and booty-thrusting, usually with the feet planted, Obamacare: term for the Affordable Care Act that has moved from pejorative to matter-of-fact shorthand and selfie: a photo taken of oneself, typically with a smartphone and shared on social media.
  • 2014: bae: a sweetheart or romantic partner, columbusing: cultural appropriation, especially the act of a white person claiming to discover things already known to minority cultures, even: deal with or reconcile difficult situations or emotions (from "I can't even"), manspreading: of a man, to sit with one's legs wide on public transit in a way that blocks other seats.
  • 2015: ammosexual, ghost, on fleek, thanks, Obama
  • 2016: woke, normalize, post-truth, #NoDAPL, 🔥
  • 2017: alternative facts, #MeToo, milkshake duck, persisterhood/persister, pussyhat, take a knee, whomst
  • 2018: yeet, (the) wall, X strong, Individual 1, white-caller crime
  • 2019: ok boomer, cancel, Karen
  • 2020: 2020, antiracism, Before Times, BIPOC, doomscrolling, pandemic, social distancing, unprecedented
  • 2021: antiwork, Big Lie, Great Resignation, long COVID, Omicron, variant, vax/vaxx
  • 2022: Dark Brandon, quiet quitting, rizz, Slava Ukraini, special military operation

Categories

In addition to the "Word of the Year", the society also selects words in other categories that vary from year to year:

Most useful

  • 2008: Barack Obama (specifically, the use of both names as combining forms, such as ObamaMania or Obamacare)
  • 2009: fail (noun or interjection used when something is egregiously unsuccessful)
  • 2010: nom (onomatopoetic form connoting eating, esp. pleasurably)
  • 2011: humblebrag (expression of false humility, especially by celebrities on Twitter)
  • 2012: -(po)calypse, -(ma)geddon (hyperbolic combining forms for various catastrophes)
  • 2013: because introducing a noun, adjective, or other part of speech (e.g., "because reasons," "because awesome").
  • 2014: even (deal with or reconcile difficult situations or emotions, from "I can't even")
  • 2015: they (gender-neutral singular pronoun for a known person, particularly as a non-binary identifier)
  • 2016: gaslight (psychologically manipulate a person into questioning their own sanity)
  • 2017: die by suicide (a variant of "to commit suicide" that does not suggest a criminal act)
  • 2018: Voldemorting (avoiding mention of unpleasant person or topic by using a replacement term à la Lord Voldemort)
  • 2019: ok boomer (retort to someone older expressing out-of-touch or condescending views)
  • 2020: Before Times (the time before the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic)
  • 2021: hard pants (pants that lack an elastic waistband or stretchy fabric)
  • 2022: quiet quitting (doing no more than the minimum required for a job)

Most creative

  • 2008: recombobulation area: an area at General Mitchell International Airport in which passengers that have passed through security screening can get their clothes and belongings back in order.
  • 2009: Dracula sneeze: covering one's mouth with the crook of one's elbow when sneezing, seen as similar to popular portrayals of the vampire Dracula, in which he hides the lower half of his face with a cape.
  • 2010: prehab: preemptive enrollment in a rehab facility to prevent relapse of an abuse problem.
  • 2011: Mellencamp: a woman who has aged out of being a "cougar", named after John Cougar Mellencamp.
  • 2012: gate lice: airline passengers who crowd around a gate, waiting to board.
  • 2013: catfish: to misrepresent oneself online, especially as part of a romantic deception.
  • 2014: columbusing: cultural appropriation, especially the act of a white person claiming to discover things already known to minority cultures.
  • 2015: ammosexual: someone who loves firearms in a fetishistic manner.
  • 2016: laissez-fairydust: magical effect brought upon by laissez-faire economics.
  • 2018: white-caller crime (phenomenon of white people calling police on black people for doing mundane things, e.g. driving while black, running while black, shopping while black)
  • 2019: nobody: (phrasal template mocking someone providing an unsolicited opinion)
  • 2021: Fauci ouchie (rhyming phrase for a COVID-19 vaccine, in honor of Dr. Anthony Fauci)
  • 2022: -ussy (suffix derived from pussy)

Most unnecessary

  • 2008: moofing (a PR firm-created term for working on the go with a laptop and cell phone)
  • 2009: sea kittens (attempted rebranding of fish by PETA)
  • 2010: refudiate (blend word of refute and repudiate used by Sarah Palin on Twitter)
  • 2011: bi-winning (term used by Charlie Sheen to describe himself pridefully, dismissing accusations of being bipolar)
  • 2012: legitimate rape (type of rape that Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin claimed rarely results in pregnancy)
  • 2013: sharknado (a tornado full of sharks, as featured in the Syfy Channel movie of that name)
  • 2014: baeless: without a romantic partner (lacking a bae).
  • 2015: manbun: man's hairstyle pulled up in a bun.

Most outrageous

  • 2008: terrorist fist jab (a phrase for a fist bump coined by Fox News newscaster E. D. Hill)
  • 2009: death panel (a supposed committee of doctors and/or bureaucrats who would decide which patients would and wouldn't receive treatment)
  • 2010: gate rape (pejorative term for invasive new airport pat-down procedure)
  • 2011: assholocracy (rule by obnoxious multi-millionaires)
  • 2012: legitimate rape (type of rape that Missouri Senate candidate Todd Akin claimed rarely results in pregnancy)
  • 2013: underbutt (the underside of buttocks, made visible by certain shorts or underwear)
  • 2014: second-amendment: v. to kill (someone) with a gun, used ironically by gun control supporters.
  • 2015: fuckboy, fuckboi: derogatory term for a man who behaves objectionably or promiscuously.

Most euphemistic

  • 2008: scooping technician (a person whose job it is to pick up dog poop)
  • 2009: hike the Appalachian trail (to go away to have sex with one's illicit lover, from a statement released by South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford to cover for visiting his Argentinean mistress)
  • 2010: kinetic event (Pentagon term for violent attacks on troops in Afghanistan)
  • 2011: job creator (a person responsible for economic growth and employment)
  • 2012: self-deportation (policy of encouraging illegal immigrants to return voluntarily to their home countries)
  • 2013: least untruthful (involving the smallest necessary lie, used by intelligence director James Clapper)
  • 2014: EIT: abbreviation for the already euphemistic "enhanced interrogation technique."
  • 2015: Netflix and chill: sexual come-on masked as a suggestion to watch Netflix and relax.
  • 2018: racially charged (circumlocution for “racist”)
  • 2019: people of means (rich people)
  • 2020: essential [workers, labor, businesses] (people, often underpaid, who are actually treated as expendable because they are required to work and thus risk infection from coronavirus)
  • 2021: unalive (used as a substitute for “suicide” or “kill” to avoid social media filters)
  • 2022: special military operation (Russian designation for invasion of Ukraine)

Most likely to succeed

  • 2008: shovel-ready (description of infrastructure projects that can be started quickly, when funds become available)
  • 2009: twenty-ten (pronunciation of the year 2010, as opposed to saying "two thousand ten" or "two thousand and ten")
  • 2010: trend (verb for exhibiting a burst of online buzz)
  • 2011: cloud (online space for the large-scale processing and storage of data)
  • 2012: marriage equality (legal recognition of same-sex marriage)
  • 2013: binge-watch (to consume vast quantities of a single show or series of visual entertainment in one sitting)
  • 2014: salty: exceptionally bitter, angry, or upset.
  • 2015: ghost: (verb) abruptly end a relationship by cutting off communication, especially online.
  • 2018: single-use (made to be used only once and destroyed)
  • 2019: ok boomer (retort to someone older expressing out-of-touch or condescending views)
  • 2020: antiracism (the practice of actively working to prevent or combat racism)
  • 2021: antiwork (position supporting the refusal to work, pushing back against labor exploitation)
  • 2022: quiet quitting (doing no more than the minimum required for a job)

Least likely to succeed

  • 2008: PUMA (an acronym for "Party Unity My Ass" and later, "People United Means Action" as used by Democrats who were disaffected after Hillary Clinton failed to secure a sufficient number of delegates)
  • 2009: Naughties, Aughties, Oughties, etc. (alternative names for the decade 2000–2009)
  • 2010: culturomics (research project from Google analyzing the history of language and culture)
  • 2011: brony (an adult male fan of the "My Little Pony" cartoon franchise)
  • 2012: phablet (mid-sized electronic device, between a smartphone and a tablet)
  • 2013: Thanksgivukkah (confluence of Thanksgiving and the first day of Hanukkah that will not be repeated for another 70,000 years)
  • 2014: platisher: online media publisher that also serves as a platform for creating content.
  • 2015: sitbit: device that rewards sedentary lifestyle (play on Fitbit fitness tracker).

Special categories

  • Election-Related Word (2008): maverick (a person who is beholden to no one, widely used by the Republican presidential and vice-presidential candidates John McCain and Sarah Palin)
  • Fan Words (2010): gleek (a fan of the TV show Glee)
  • Occupy Words (2011): the 99%, 99 percenters (those held to be at a financial or political disadvantage to the top moneymakers, the one-percenters)
  • Election Words (2012): binders (full of women) (a term used by Mitt Romney in the second presidential debate to describe the resumes of female job candidates that he consulted as governor of Massachusetts)
  • Most Productive (2013): -shaming: (from slut-shaming) type of public humiliation (fat-shaming, pet-shaming).
  • Most Notable Hashtag (2014): #blacklivesmatter: protest over Black people killed at the hands of police (esp. Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., Eric Garner in Staten Island).

Australian National Dictionary Centre

The Australian National Dictionary Centre has announced a Word of the Year each since 2006. The word is chosen by the editorial staff, and is selected on the basis of having come to some prominence in the Australian social and cultural landscape during the year. The Word of the Year is often reported in the media as being Australia's word of the year, but the word is not always an Australian word.

Year Word
2006 podcast
2007 me-tooism
2008 GFC
2009 twitter
2010 vuvuzela
2011
2012 green-on-blue
2013 bitcoin
2014 shirtfront
2015 sharing economy
2016 democracy sausage
2017 Kwaussie
2018 Canberra bubble
2019 Voice
2020 iso
2021 strollout
2022 teal

Cambridge Dictionary

The Cambridge Dictionary Word of the Year, by Cambridge University Press & Assessment, has been published every year since 2015. 

The Cambridge Word of the Year is led by the data - what users look up - in the world's most popular dictionary for English language learners. 

In 2022, the Cambridge Word of the Year was 'homer', caused by Wordle players looking up five-letter words, especially those that non-American players were less familiar with. 

In 2021, the Cambridge Dictionary Word of the Year was 'perseverance'. In 2020, 'quarantine'.

YEAR
2015 austerity
2016 paranoid
2017 populism
2018 nomophobia
2019 upcycling
2020 quarantine
2021 perserverance
2022 homer

Collins English Dictionary

The Collins English Dictionary has announced a Word of the Year every year since 2013, and prior to this, announced a new 'word of the month' each month in 2012. Published in Glasgow, UK, Collins English Dictionary has been publishing English dictionaries since 1819.

Toward the end of each calendar year, Collins release a shortlist of notable words or those that have come to prominence in the previous 12 months. The shortlist typically comprises ten words, though in 2014 only four words were announced as the Word of the Year shortlist.

The Collins Words of the Year are selected by the Collins Dictionary team across Glasgow and London, consisting of lexicographers, editorial, marketing, and publicity staff, though previously the selection process has been open to the public.

Whilst the word is not required to be new to feature, the appearance of words in the list is often supported by usage statistics and cross-reference against Collins' extensive corpus to understand how language may have changed or developed in the previous year. The Collins Word of the Year is also not restricted to UK language usage, and words are often chosen that apply internationally as well, for example, fake news in 2017.

Year Word of the Year Definition Shortlist
2013 Geek If you call someone, usually a man or boy, a geek, you are saying in an unkind way that they are stupid, awkward, or weak.
2014 Photobomb If you photobomb someone, you spoil a photograph of them by stepping in front of them as the photograph is taken, often doing something silly such as making a funny face.
2015 Binge-watch If you binge-watch a television series, you watch several episodes one after another in a short time.
2016 Brexit The withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union in January 2020.
2017 Fake news False, often sensational, information disseminated under the guise of news reporting.
2018 Single-use Made to be used once only.
2019 Climate strike A form of protest in which people absent themselves from education or work to join demonstrations demanding action to counter climate change.
2020 Lockdown If there is a lockdown, people must stay at home unless they need to go out for certain reasons, such as going to work, buying food or taking exercise.
2021 NFT A digital certificate of ownership of a unique asset, such as an artwork or a collectible.
2022 Permacrisis An extended period of instability and insecurity, esp one resulting from a series of catastrophic events.

Macquarie Dictionary

The Macquarie Dictionary, which is the dictionary of Australian English, updates the online dictionary each year with new words, phrases, and definitions. These can be viewed on their website.

Each year the editors select a short-list of new words added to the dictionary and invite the public to vote on their favourite. The public vote is held in January and results in the People's Choice winner. The most influential word of the year is also selected by the Word of the Year Committee which is chaired by the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sydney, Dr Michael Spence. The Editor of the Macquarie Dictionary, Susan Butler, is also a committee member. The Committee meets annually to select the overall winning words.

The following is the list of winning words since the Macquarie Word of the Year first began in 2006:

Year Committee's Choice People's Choice
2006 muffin top (No overall winner. See Macquarie website for category winners)
2007 pod slurping password fatigue
2008 toxic debt flashpacker
2009 shovel ready tweet
2010 googleganger shockumentary
2011 burqini fracking
2012 phantom vibration syndrome First World problem
2013 infovore onesie
2014 mansplain shareplate
2015 captain's call captain's call
2016 fake news halal snack pack
2017 milkshake duck framily
2018 me too single-use
2019 cancel culture robodebt
2020 doomscrolling, rona Karen
2021 strollout strollout
2022 teal bachelor's handbag

Merriam-Webster

The lists of Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year (for each year) are ten-word lists published annually by the American dictionary-publishing company Merriam-Webster, Inc., which feature the ten words of the year from the English language. These word lists started in 2003 and have been published at the end of each year. At first, Merriam-Webster determined its contents by analyzing page hits and popular searches on its website. Since 2006, the list has been determined by an online poll and by suggestions from visitors to the website.

The following is the list of words that became Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year since 2003:

Oxford

Oxford University Press, which publishes the Oxford English Dictionary and many other dictionaries, announces an Oxford Dictionaries UK Word of the Year and an Oxford Dictionaries US Word of the Year; sometimes these are the same word. The Word of the Year need not have been coined within the past twelve months but it does need to have become prominent or notable during that time. There is no guarantee that the Word of the Year will be included in any Oxford dictionary. The Oxford Dictionaries Words of the Year are selected by editorial staff from each of the Oxford dictionaries. The selection team is made up of lexicographers and consultants to the dictionary team, and editorial, marketing, and publicity staff.

Year UK Word of the Year US Word of the Year Hindi Word of the Year
2004 chav
2005 sudoku podcast
2006 bovvered carbon-neutral
2007 carbon footprint locavore
2008 credit crunch hypermiling
2009 simples (Compare the Meerkat catchphrase) unfriend
2010 big society refudiate
2011 squeezed middle
2012 omnishambles GIF (noun)
2013 selfie
2014 vape
2015 😂 (Face With Tears of Joy, Unicode: U+1F602, part of emoji)
2016 post-truth
2017 youthquake Aadhaar
2018 toxic Nari Shakti or Women Power
2019 climate emergency Samvidhaan or Constitution
2020 No single word chosen Aatmanirbharta or Self-Reliance
2021 vax
2022 goblin mode

Grant Barrett

Since 2004, lexicographer Grant Barrett has published a words-of-the-year list, usually in The New York Times, though he does not name a winner.

Dictionary.com

In 2010, Dictionary.com announced its first word of the year, 'change', and has done so in December every year since. The selection is based on search trends on the site throughout the year and the news events that drive them.

The following is the list of annual words since beginning with the first in 2010:

Similar word lists

A Word a Year

Since 2004, Susie Dent, an English lexicographer has published a column, "A Word a Year", in which she chooses a single word from each of the last 101 years to represent preoccupations of the time. Susie Dent notes that the list is subjective. Each year, she gives a completely different set of words.

Since Susie Dent works for the Oxford University Press, her words of choice are often incorrectly referred to as "Oxford Dictionary's Word of the Year".

Other countries

In Germany, a Wort des Jahres has been selected since 1972 (for year 1971) by the Society of the German Language. In addition, an Unwort des Jahres (Un-word of the year or No-no Word of the Year) has been nominated since 1991, for a word or phrase in public speech deemed insulting or socially inappropriate (such as "Überfremdung"). Similar selections are made each year since 1999 in Austria, 2002 in Liechtenstein, and 2003 in Switzerland. Since 2008, language publisher Langenscheidt supports a search for the German youth word of the year, which aims to find new words entering the language through the vernacular of young people.

In Denmark, the Word of the year has been selected since 2008 by Danmarks Radio and Dansk Sprognævn.

In Japan, the Kanji of the year (kotoshi no kanji) has been selected since 1995. Kanji are adopted Chinese characters in Japanese language. Japan also runs an annual word of the year contest called " U-Can New and Trendy Word Grand Prix" (U-Can shingo, ryūkōgo taishō) sponsored by Jiyu Kokuminsha. Both the kanji and word/phrases of the year are often reflective of Japanese current events and attitudes. For example, in 2011 following the Fukushima power plant disaster, the frustratingly enigmatic phrase used by Japanese officials before the explosion regarding the possibility of meltdown – "the possibility of recriticality is not zero" (Sairinkai no kanōsei zero de wa nai) – became the top phrase of the year. In the same year, the kanji indicating 'bond' (i.e. familial bond or friendship) became the kanji of the year, expressing the importance of collectiveness in the face of disaster.

In Norway, the Word of the year poll is carried out since 2012.

In Portugal, the Word of the year poll is carried out since 2009.

In Russia, the Word of the year poll is carried out since 2007.

In Spain, the Word of the year is carried out by Fundéu since 2013.

In Ukraine, the Word of the year poll is carried out since 2013.

Inequality (mathematics)

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