Word of the year
Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Adventurer experience
The word(s) of the year, sometimes called "Word(s) of the Year" or "WOTY", are special words or phrases that people use a lot during a year.
This idea started in Germany with the Wort des Jahres in 1971. Later, in 1999, Austria joined to show how German is spoken in different ways, showing its pluricentric nature.
In the United States, the American Dialect Society has one of the oldest English-language awards for a word of the year. They choose it by asking many linguists to vote after the year ends. Many other groups also pick their own words of the year for different reasons.
American Dialect Society
Main article: List of American Dialect Society's Words of the Year
Since 1990, the American Dialect Society has picked one or more words or terms to be the "Word of the Year" in the United States. Along with the "Word of the Year," the society also chooses words for other groups such as "Most Outrageous," "Most Creative," and "Most Likely to Succeed."
| Year | Word of the Year |
|---|---|
| 1990 | bushlips |
| 1991 | mother of all โ |
| 1992 | Not! |
| 1993 | information superhighway |
| 1994 | Tie: cyber and morph |
| 1995 | Tie: World Wide Web and newt |
| 1996 | mom |
| 1997 | millennium bug |
| 1998 | e- |
| 1999 | Y2K |
| 2000 | chad |
| 2001 | 9-11, 9/11 or September 11 |
| 2002 | weapons of mass destruction or WMD |
| 2003 | metrosexual |
| 2004 | red/blue/purple states |
| 2005 | truthiness |
| 2006 | to be plutoed, to pluto |
| 2007 | subprime |
| 2008 | bailout |
| 2009 | tweet |
| 2010 | app |
| 2011 | occupy |
| 2012 | #hashtag |
| 2013 | because |
| 2014 | #blacklivesmatter |
| 2015 | they |
| 2016 | dumpster fire |
| 2017 | fake news |
| 2018 | tender-age shelter |
| 2019 | (my) pronouns |
| 2020 | Covid |
| 2021 | Insurrection |
| 2022 | -ussy |
| 2023 | enshittification |
| 2024 | rawdog |
| 2025 | slop |
Australian National Dictionary Centre
The Australian National Dictionary Centre has picked a Word of the Year each year since 2006. The word is chosen by the centre's editors. They pick the word that became well-known in Australia that year. It isn't always a word that started in Australia.
| Year | Word of the Year |
|---|---|
| 2006 | podcast |
| 2007 | me-tooism |
| 2008 | GFC |
| 2009 | |
| 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 |
| 2023 | Matilda |
| 2024 | Colesworth |
| 2025 | social media ban |
Cambridge Dictionary
The Cambridge Dictionary picks a Word of the Year every year. This started in 2015 and is run by Cambridge University Press & Assessment. The word is chosen using data from users, what is happening in the world, and language trends.
In 2024, the Word of the Year was "manifest". This word usually means "obvious" or "to show something clearly". It was chosen because many famous people, especially on social media, used it to talk about imagining good things they want to happen.
| Year | Word of the Year | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | austerity | |
| 2016 | paranoid | Uncertainty surrounding global events. |
| 2017 | populism | |
| 2018 | nomophobia | |
| 2019 | upcycling | |
| 2020 | quarantine | Worldwide lockdowns as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. |
| 2021 | perseverance | Deployment of NASA Mars rover Perseverance, as well as societal recovery after COVID-19. |
| 2022 | homer | The answer to a difficult Wordle puzzle. |
| 2023 | hallucinate | Referring to AI hallucinations: erroneous material generated by AI. |
| 2024 | manifest | |
| 2025 | parasocial |
Collins English Dictionary
The Collins English Dictionary picks a special "Word of the Year" every year since 2013. In 2012, they chose a new "word of the month" each month. This dictionary, made in Glasgow, UK, has helped people learn English since 1819.
At the end of each year, Collins makes a list of ten important words from that year. Sometimes, the list has fewer than ten words. A team of experts at Collins chooses the Word of the Year. They look at how often words are used and how language changes. The chosen word can come from anywhere in the world, not just the UK. For example, "fake news" was picked in 2017.
Dictionary.com
In 2010, Dictionary.com began choosing a special word of the year. They pick the word based on what people search for most on their website during the year. This often relates to big news events. They have done this every December since then.
| Year | Word of the Year |
|---|---|
| 2010 | change |
| 2011 | tergiversate |
| 2012 | bluster |
| 2013 | privacy |
| 2014 | exposure |
| 2015 | identity |
| 2016 | xenophobia |
| 2017 | complicit |
| 2018 | misinformation |
| 2019 | existential |
| 2020 | pandemic |
| 2021 | allyship |
| 2022 | woman |
| 2023 | hallucinate |
| 2024 | demure |
| 2025 | 6-7 |
The Economist
Since 2021, the British journal The Economist has chosen a word of the year.
| Year | Word of the Year |
|---|---|
| 2021 | vax |
| 2022 | hybrid work |
| 2023 | ChatGPT |
| 2024 | kakistocracy |
| 2025 | slop |
Macquarie Dictionary
The Macquarie Dictionary is a dictionary of Australian English. Each year, it updates its online version with new words, phrases, and definitions that people are using.
The editors look at all the new words from the year. They make a shortlist and let the public vote for their favorite in November. This vote picks the People's Choice winner. A special committee, including the editorial team, David Astle, and a language expert, also chooses the most important word of the year. They meet every year to decide the winner.
Here are the winning words since the Macquarie Word of the Year began in 2006:
| Year | Committee's Choice | People's Choice |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | muffin top | |
| 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 and rona | Karen and covidiot |
| 2021 | strollout | strollout |
| 2022 | teal | bachelor's handbag |
| 2023 | cozzie livs | generative AI |
| 2024 | enshittification | enshittification |
| 2025 | AI slop | AI slop |
Merriam-Webster
Main article: Lists of Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year
Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year are special lists of ten important words chosen each year by the American dictionary company Merriam-Webster. These lists started in 2003 and are shared at the end of every year. At first, Merriam-Webster picked the words by seeing which ones people searched for most on their website. Since 2006, people can vote online and also suggest words to help decide the list.
Here are the words that have been chosen as Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year since 2003:
| Year | Word of the Year |
|---|---|
| 2003 | democracy |
| 2004 | blog |
| 2005 | integrity |
| 2006 | truthiness |
| 2007 | w00t |
| 2008 | bailout |
| 2009 | admonish |
| 2010 | austerity |
| 2011 | pragmatic |
| 2012 | socialism and capitalism |
| 2013 | science |
| 2014 | culture |
| 2015 | -ism |
| 2016 | surreal |
| 2017 | feminism |
| 2018 | justice |
| 2019 | they |
| 2020 | pandemic |
| 2021 | vaccine |
| 2022 | gaslighting |
| 2023 | authentic |
| 2024 | polarization |
| 2025 | slop |
Oxford
Oxford University Press, which publishes the Oxford English Dictionary and other dictionaries, picks a UK Word of the Year and a US Word of the Year each year. Sometimes both choices are the same word, and it is called the Word of the Year. The word does not have to be new, but it must have become important or well-known that year. The team that chooses the words includes dictionary experts and other staff members from Oxford.
| Year | UK Word of the Year | US Word of the Year | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | chav | ||
| 2005 | sudoku | podcast | |
| 2006 | bovvered | carbon-neutral | |
| 2007 | carbon footprint | locavore | |
| 2008 | credit crunch | hypermiling | |
| 2009 | simples | unfriend | |
| 2010 | big society | refudiate | |
| 2011 | squeezed middle | ||
| 2012 | omnishambles | GIF (noun) | |
| 2013 | selfie | ||
| 2014 | vape | ||
| 2015 | ๐ (Face With Tears of Joy emoji) | ||
| 2016 | post-truth | ||
| 2017 | youthquake | Aadhaar | |
| 2018 | toxic | Nari Shakti (Women Power) | |
| 2019 | climate emergency | Samvidhaan | |
| 2020 | No single word chosen | Aatmanirbharta | |
| 2021 | vax | ||
| 2022 | goblin mode | ||
| 2023 | rizz | ||
| 2024 | brain rot | ||
| 2025 | rage bait | ||
Grant Barrett
Since 2004, lexicographer Grant Barrett has shared a list of important words each year. These lists often appear in The New York Times.
Similar word lists
A Word a Year
Since 2004, Susie Dent, an expert on words, has picked one word each year from the past 101 years. She shows what people were thinking about at the time. She says her choices are her own views, not official decisions. Because she works for the Oxford University Press, some people think her words are the "Oxford Dictionary's Word of the Year."
Other countries
Many countries have their own ways of picking a special word for the year. In Austria, a word of the year has been chosen since 1999. In Germany, a word of the year has been picked since 1972. Other German-speaking places like Liechtenstein and Switzerland also choose their own words of the year.
Denmark, Japan, Norway, Portugal, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine, and the Netherlands all have their own traditions for picking a word of the year. Japan, for example, has held a yearly contest for new or popular phrases since 1984 and also picks a special symbol for the year. These words often show what was important in that country during the year.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Word of the year, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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