Saturday, November 23, 2019
The Word of the Year 2011
The Word of the Year 2011  The Word of the Year 2011  The Word of the Year 2011                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  Each year at about this time, the English-language media rolls out various reports announcing the word of the year according to one or more authorities. These pieces imply or overtly suggest that these selections are keywords for our societyââ¬â¢s values, beliefs, and obsessions.  But a glance at such choices reveals that these words are the linguistic equivalent of candy  satisfying (or not  sometimes theyââ¬â¢re the equivalent of chocolate-covered brussels sprouts) but not sustaining. The following lists of the top word for each year of the past decade suggest that one yearââ¬â¢s byword can be the next yearââ¬â¢s punch line (or a least a later periodââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Huh?â⬠):  Merriam-Webster  2010: austerity  2009: admonish  2008: bailout  2007: w00t  2006: truthiness  2005: integrity  2004: blog  2003: democracy  American Dialect Society  2010: app  2009: tweet  2008: bailout  2007: subprime  2006: plutoed  2005: truthiness  2004: red state/blue state  2003: metrosexual  2002: weapons of mass destruction  2001: 9-11 (most often styled 9/11)  Global Language Monitor  2011: occupy  2010: spillcam  2009: Twitter  2008: change  2007: hybrid  2006: sustainable  2005: refugee  2004: incivility  2003: embedded  2002: misunderestimate  2001: ground zero  Oxford Dictionaries  2011: squeezed middle  2010: big society  2009: unfriend  2008: credit crunch  2007: footprint  2006: bovvered  2005: podcast  2004: chav  Technological terms like app and tweet have variable staying power. Blog, which was ten years old when Merriam-Webster crowned it in 2004 (while app may be old enough to vote), isnââ¬â¢t going anywhere, nor is podcast. But eventually, many once popular terms evoke nothing more than a chuckle (ââ¬Å"floppy disk,â⬠ anyone?). And to w00t, I say, ââ¬Å"W00t-ever.â⬠  Jargon from economic and political contexts serves as a shorthand, but Steven Colbertââ¬â¢s brilliant-in-its-time truthiness is as stale as Bush-speak jokes (or perhaps I misunderestimate it), and ââ¬Å"weapons of mass destructionâ⬠ and embedded have acquired a derisive connotation their coiners did not intend.  Variance in American English and British English is also an obstacle: Several of the Oxford Dictionaries selections are obscure to US readers. (ââ¬Å"Big societyâ⬠ refers to localism in government, bovvered is part of a British TV characterââ¬â¢s dismissive catchphrase ââ¬Å"Am I bovvered?â⬠ and chav refers to a lumpen-prole UK subculture with a perplexing penchant for faux-Burberry plaid couture.)  Environmentally oriented terms  at least the ones in these lists  seem to have legs: Weââ¬â¢re still discussing sustainability and footprints (as in ââ¬Å"carbon footprintâ⬠), though perhaps without the fresh vigor applied just a few years before.  A couple of these lists offer a word of the year for 2011 (the other listmakers have not yet weighed in for the current year), but you are also entitled to your opinion. Which word (or phrase) do you nominate for the honor?                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the General category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:50 Idioms About TalkingHomogeneous vs. Heterogeneous10 Varieties of Syntax to Improve Your Writing    
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