Each year, the major dictionary companies trot out their choice for Word of the Year and its runner-ups, based partly on search frequency and partly on staff consensus. Note that these words are selected not for their staying power — Words of the Year often fade into obscurity — but for the significance of their usage in a given year.
Merriam-Webster’s 2012 Word of the Year is a toss-up between capitalism and socialism, reflecting the controversy and debates about universal health care and discussion about the comparative government systems in the United States and in much of Europe.
These words are straightforward — except that they’re not: Capitalism is fraught with negative connotations (and not just by those who oppose the system), and many Americans, as an unfortunately lingering artifact of the Red Menace of the mid-twentieth century, confuse socialism (the concept, not the word) with communism and fear both even though the US government system, like many European ones, is irrevocably infused with socialistic components.
Dictionary.com’s choice is bluster, which means “loud, swaggering, often empty boasts, threats, or other comments” — an appropriate term, considering the unusually contentious political climate in the United States over the last year. The American arm of the Oxford Dictionaries chose GIF (pronounced “jif” and standing for “graphics interchange format”), thanks to the ubiquity of GIFs, simple animations consisting of a looped series of images, employed to humorous effect but also in scientific models and other contexts. They’re not new, but their place in popular culture has recently been elevated by the ease with which they are created.
The selection by editors at Oxford University Press’s UK headquarters is omnishambles, which denotes a thoroughly mismanaged situation notable for a chain of errors. The sense is similar to the American English acronyms fubar and snafu, which originated among service personnel inspired with an ironic nod toward the military’s propensity for describing bureaucratic phenomena with abbreviations. (For the record, fubar stands for “fouled up beyond all recognition,” and snafu is an acronym for “situation normal — all fouled up” — except that I’ve substituted fouled for another word starting with f, as do many others who cater to their own or others’ delicate sensibilities when they spell these terms out.)
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Back to Word of the Year 2022
Word of the Year 2012
Posted on 19 December 2013
The Committee’s choice of Word of the Year 2012 is:
phantom vibration syndrome |
noun a syndrome characterised by constant anxiety in relation to one’s mobile phone and an obsessional conviction that the phone has vibrated in response to an incoming call when in fact it hasn’t. Also, phantom phone vibration syndrome. |
The committee thought that phantom vibration syndrome (which they suggest should be abbreviated to PVS in the spirit of the times) was an indication of how attached we have become to this technology which has had such an impact on all our lives. They enjoyed the self-deprecating tone of First World problem and acknowledged that it is frighteningly true how adept small children (technomites) are with new technology. They thought that the origins of Aussie Rules in the Indigenous game marngrook should be recognised and observed the democratisation of knowledge and enterprising activity in the term crowdfunding. |
The Committee would like to give honourable mention to:
crowdfunding
noun the obtaining of small donations from individuals contacted through social networks, as to fund a project, support a cause, etc.
Also, crowd source funding.
–crowdfunded, adjective
technomite
noun (humorous) a young child who is adept in the use of digital media.
[techno- + mite (a very small child)]
marngrook
noun a type of football played by Aboriginal people of south-eastern Australia before European settlement, being characterised by large numbers of players covering a wide area of ground, a ball made from stuffed animal skin, and a style of play which involved dropping the ball onto the foot and kicking it, and leaping high above others to catch it; seen as an influence on Australian Rules.
[in various Victorian Aboriginal languages: game ball]
First World problem
noun a problem that relates to the affluent lifestyle associated with the First World, and that would never arise in the poverty-stricken circumstances of the Third World, as having to settle for plunger coffee when one’s espresso machine is not functioning.
The People’s Choice Award for 2012 goes to:
First World problem |
noun a problem that relates to the affluent lifestyle associated with the First World, and that would never arise in the poverty-stricken circumstances of the Third World, as having to settle for plunger coffee when one’s espresso machine is not functioning. |
Category winners:
Download the pdf below to view all the entries considered for Word of the Year 2012.
Download:
2012_entries.pdf
NEW YORK, Nov. 12, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Oxford American Dictionaries announced today that it chose the verb GIF as its 2012 Word of the Year. According to Oxford Dictionaries Online GIF is defined as:
- GIF, verb; to create a GIF file of (an image or video sequence, especially relating to an event).
«The GIF, a compressed file format for images that can be used to create simple, looping animations, turned 25 this year, but like so many other relics of the 80s, it has never been trendier,» notes Katherine Martin, Head of the US Dictionaries Program at Oxford University Press USA. «GIF celebrated a lexical milestone in 2012, gaining traction as a verb, not just a noun. The GIF has evolved from a medium for pop-cultural memes into a tool with serious applications including research and journalism, and its lexical identity is transforming to keep pace.»
Indeed, GIFing has had an amazing year in 2012. In January the New York Public Library launched stereogranimator allowing visitors to create GIFs of 40,000+ digitized stereographs from its collection and share them. Then in March Tumblr hit 20 billion blog posts. July saw the 20th anniversary of the first GIF posted on the World Wide Web, a photograph of the band «Les Horribles Cernettes». In August GIFing was perfect medium for sharing scenes from the Summer Olympics in London, especially this coverage of the vault from The Atlantic. Most recently many media outlets were live-GIFing the 2012 presidential debates.
GIF beat out a number of other contenders for Word of the Year (WOTY) this year. A shortlist of other candidates under consideration included:
- Eurogeddon: the potential financial collapse of the Eurozone, envisaged as having catastrophic implications for the region’s economic stability [from euro + (arma)geddon]
- Super PAC: a type of independent political action committee which may raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, and individuals but is not permitted to contribute to or coordinate directly with parties or candidates
- Superstorm: an unusually large and destructive storm
- Nomophobia: anxiety caused by being without one’s mobile phone
[from no and mo(bile) + phobia] - Higgs boson: a subatomic particle whose existence is predicted by the theory that unified the weak and electromagnetic interactions
- YOLO: you only live once; typically used as rationale or endorsement for impulsive or irresponsible behavior
- MOOC: massive open online course; a university course offered free of charge via the internet
To speak with a dictionary editor at Oxford American Dictionaries contact:
Purdy/Director of Publicity
212.726.6032 / [email protected]
About the Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year (WOTY)
Among their other activities, lexicographers at Oxford University Press track how the vocabulary of the English language is changing from year to year. Every year, a ‘Word of the Year’ is debated and chosen to reflect the ethos of the year and its lasting potential as a word of cultural significance.
Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year in the US and the UK
In most years, 2012 included, the UK and US dictionary teams choose different Words of the Year. Each country’s vocabulary develops in different ways, according to what is happening both culturally and in the news, and as such the Words of the Year are usually different. The 2012 UK WOTY is «omnishambles». For more information on the UK WOTY and shortlist, please contact:
Nicola Burton | [email protected] | 01865 353911 | 07921 882185
Who chooses the Word of the Year?
The selection team is made up of lexicographers and consultants to the dictionary team, along with editorial, marketing, and publicity staff.
When will GIF make its debut in Oxford‘s dictionaries?
GIF is currently recognized and defined by Oxford Dictionaries Online as a noun. If the verbal use of Gif gains sufficient currency, it will be considered for inclusion in the future. For more information regarding how/when new or shortlisted words might make it into the dictionary check out: how we decide whether a new word should be included in an Oxford Dictionary.
Past WOTYs include:
About Oxford Dictionaries
We publish a wide range of dictionaries in many languages and for many markets:
- Oxforddictionaries.com: our free online comprehensive current English dictionary featuring up-to-date bilingual dictionaries in four languages; puzzles and games; English grammar and usage tips, and the OxfordWords blog
- The Oxford English Dictionary — the definitive record of English language development
- dictionaries for learning English
- dictionaries and thesauruses of current American English
- foreign language dictionaries
About Oxford University Press
Oxford University Press, a department of the University of Oxford, furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. The world’s largest and most international university press, Oxford University Press currently publishes more than 6,000 new publications per year, has offices in around fifty countries, and employs some 5,000 people worldwide. It has become familiar to millions through a diverse publishing program that includes scholarly works in all academic disciplines, bibles, music, school and college textbooks, children’s books, materials for teaching English as a foreign language, business books, dictionaries and reference books, and journals. For more information about Oxford University Press visit www.oup.com.
Visit the Oxford Dictionaries blog for more information on the WOTY 2012
SOURCE Oxford University Press
The American Dialect Society has selected its Word of the Year for 2012, and the winner was a bit of a surprise. It wasn’t fiscal cliff, the ubiquitous term in the news from Capitol Hill. And it wasn’t YOLO, the youthful acronym for «You Only Live Once» that quickly rose (and just as quickly fell) this past year. No, the ultimate champion was that mainstay of the Twittersphere, hashtag.
A hashtag is a convention used on Twitter to organize conversations, mark topics, or make witty commentary, created by appending a word or phrase with the hash symbol (#) preceding it. If you need a primer, check out my Word Routes column about how hashtags have evolved into vehicles of satire and self-mockery, and Dennis Baron’s column in which he presciently selected hashtag (or rather #hashtag) as his own Word of the Year.
As Chair of the New Words Committee for the American Dialect Society, I’ve been actively involved in the WOTY selection process for the last several years. Interestingly enough, in three of the last four years the winning word has come from the tech world: we picked tweet for 2009 and app for 2010. (The winner for 2011 was occupy.) And as was the case with tweet and app, hashtag ultimately was the Society’s choice despite not being on the initial list of nominations, receiving a groundswell of support at the end.
The ADS met this year at the Boston Marriott Copley Place, in conjunction with the Linguistic Society of America. Many LSA members and other interested onlookers joined us, filling up a hotel ballroom with more than 200 seats. As usual, it was a spirited affair, full of impassioned lobbying for and against different nominees.
ADS executive secretary Allan Metcalf kicked off the proceedings, moving swiftly to the first category: Most Useful. YOLO seemed like a strong choice, considering the many uses that it has inspired, as an excuse for bad behavior or as a sarcastic, self-referential commentary on the whole YOLO phenomenon. But after a runoff, YOLO lost out to -(ma)geddon and -(po)calypse, which were paired together for their uses as combining forms (derived from armageddon and apocalypse) to describe various calamities in hyperbolic terms.
In the Most Creative category, mansplaining (what happens when a man condescendingly explains something to female listeners) was the subject of much debate. Though the word was generally favored, some felt that it wasn’t quite «creative» enough, since it simply grafts the man- prefix in the same way as such words as mancation and manscaping. Ultimately, mansplaining was defeated in a runoff against gate lice, an evocative term for passengers who crowd around an airport gate when a plane begins boarding.
Words (and phrases) can be nominated in multiple categories, and such was the case for legitmate rape, the notorious expression used by Todd Akin in his bid for a Senate seat in Missouri. Legitimate rape was nominated in both the Most Unnecessary and Most Outrageous categories, and it handily won both contests. Another clear favorite came in the Most Euphemistic category: self-deportation, the policy (favored by candidate Mitt Romney) of encouraging illegal immigrants to return voluntarily to their home countries.
Next came one of the more glamorous categories: Most Likely to Succeed. There were many worthy contenders, including fiscal cliff, superstorm, and big data. But the big winner was marriage equality, which has come to be the accepted term for discussing the growing legal recognition of same-sex marriage in the United States. In the Least Likely to Succeed category, YOLO was again nominated and ended up as a co-winner (or co-loser) with phablet (a device that’s not quite a phone and not quite a tablet), as they were separated by a mere one vote in the runoff.
As we’ve had in past election years, we added a special category of election-related words, including such choices as 47 percent, Etch-a-Sketch, Eastwooding, and malarkey. But a nomination from the floor secured a win for binders (full of women), the term used by Romney in the second presidential debate to describe the resumes of female job candidates that he consulted as governor of Massachusetts.
Finally it was time to make nominations for the overall Word of the Year. The slate filled with some expected choices, such as YOLO, fiscal cliff, 47 percent, and Gangnam style. But it came down to a runoff between the Most Likely to Succeed winner, marriage equality, and a new nominee: hashtag. Though hashtag has been around for a few years now (first used on Twitter in 2007), it’s fair to say that 2012 was the Year of the Hashtag. Hashtagging became so popular that the practice spread to other social media, and hashtag could sometimes be heard in oral use introducing a snappy metacommentary on what had just been said. And as Dennis Baron pointed out, this was also the year that a baby was named Hashtag.
With WOTY 2012 behind us, we can start looking forward to what might be selected for 2013. I’ll make an early prediction: while 2012 brought us superstorm (as in Superstorm Sandy), 2013 is going to introduce us all to another super natural phenomenon: supercomet!
Finally, here’s a video of the end of the WOTY session, from my perspective as a vote-counter.
With the BBC embroiled in a crisis of its own making and the British government showing itself to be gaffe-prone, it is perhaps appropriate that Oxford Dictionaries’ word of the year is omnishambles.
Oxford University Press has crowned the word its top term of 2012, defining it as «a situation that has been comprehensively mismanaged, characterised by a string of blunders and miscalculations».
Each year the publisher tracks how the English language is changing and chooses a word that best reflects the mood of the year. The publisher typically chooses separate British and American winners. This year’s American champion is gif, short for graphics interchange format: one of the internet’s oldest ways of transmitting pictures, it has undergone a viral resurgence in popularity as people rediscover how to post animated versions online.
Coined by writers of the satirical television show The Thick of It, omnishambles has been applied to everything from government PR blunders to the crisis-ridden preparations for the London Olympics.
Oxford University Press lexicographer Susie Dent said the word was chosen for its popularity as well as its «linguistic productivity».
She said «a notable coinage coming from the word is Romneyshambles», a derisive term used by the British press after the US presidential candidate Mitt Romney expressed doubts about London’s ability to host a successful Olympics.
Omnishambles was chosen over shortlisted terms including mummy porn, the genre exemplified by the best-selling 50 Shades book series, and green-on-blue, military attacks by forces regarded as neutral, as when members of the Afghan army or police attack foreign troops.
The Olympics offered up finalists including the verb «to medal»; Games-makers, the name given to thousands of Olympic volunteers; and distance runner Mo Farah’s victory dance, the Mobot.
Europe’s financial crisis lent the shortlisted word eurogeddon, while technology produced second-screening – watching TV while simultaneously using a computer, phone or tablet – and social media popularised the acronym Yolo, you only live once.
The final shortlisted term is an old word given new life. Pleb, a derogatory epithet for lower-class people, was alleged to have been uttered to a police officer by the British cabinet minister Andrew Mitchell. He denied using the word but later resigned.
All the shortlisted words have made a splash in 2012 but editors say there is no guarantee any of them will endure long enough to enter the hallowed pages of the Oxford English Dictionary.