English language records millionth word today…kind of
According to the Global Language Monitor, the word (phrase?) Web 2.0 became the millionth word of the English language today at 10:22 Stratford-on-Avon time. It barely beat out the “word” n00b, a classic from the gamer community, a disparaging term meaning a neophyte in game playing. Others in the top 15 for the race to 1,000,000,000 were Octomom, sexting, defriend and recessionista.
To defriend someone is to remove him from your list of contacts on MySpace, Facebook or other social networking sites. An ad campaign from Burger King asked people to defriend 10 people to receive a free Whopper. How can that really be a word? Recessionista is a portmanteau of recession and fashionista, meaning someone who strives to dress chic even though she’s broke. When the economy gets going again, this word should disappear. So why does it need to go into our permanent collection?
The Global Language Monitor says it has rules for determining when a word really becomes legitimate enough for the collection. It has to appear at least 25,000 times in a variety of geographic locations and media. The man behind the project said a word is created about once every 98 minutes.
As a professional writer, my first response is argh! These made up words and language additions drive me insane. Do you realize how long it takes to dig to find if Octomom has to be capitalized or hyphenated? For gosh sake’s… did you see that n00b uses zeros? How the heck am I supposed to know that?
This brings up the question of finding the 2009 ultimate style guide. The Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary has, give or take, about a quarter of a million words and definitions. The edgy, off-color Urban Dictionary claims to have 4,032,262 definitions written since 1999. The word of the day today is beat feet, which means to leave a selected area, as in “My bitter ex-girlfriend showed up at the party I was at, so Jeff gave me a heads up and I beat feet.” Or should we rely on the Coffee house fact finders who post to Wikipedia? The Associated Press Stylebook just doesn’t help at times like these.
Here’s the top 16 near 1,000,000,000:
- 1,000,000: Web 2.0 – The next generation of web products and services, coming soon to a browser near you.
- 999,999: Jai Ho! – The Hindi phrase signifying the joy of victory, used as an exclamation, sometimes rendered as “It is accomplished”. Achieved English-language popularity through the multiple Academy Award Winning film, “Slumdog Millionaire”.
- 999,998: N00b — From the Gamer Community, a neophyte in playing a particular game; used as a disparaging term.
- 999,997: Slumdog – a formerly disparaging, now often endearing, comment upon those residing in the slums of India.
- 999,996: Cloud Computing – The ‘cloud’ has been technical jargon for the Internet for many years. It is now passing into more general usage.
- 999,995: Carbon Neutral — One of the many phrases relating to the effort to stem Climate Change.
- 999,994: Slow Food — Food other than the fast-food variety hopefully produced locally (locavores).
- 999,993: Octomom – The media phenomenon relating to the travails of the mother of the octuplets.
- 999,992: Greenwashing – Re-branding an old, often inferior, product as environmentally friendly.
- 999,991: Sexting – Sending email (or text messages) with sexual content.
- 999,990: Shovel Ready – Projects are ready to begin immediately upon the release of federal stimulus funds.
- 999,989: Defriend – Social networking terminology for cutting the connection with a formal friend.
- 999,988: Chengguan – Urban management officers, a cross between mayors, sheriff, and city managers.
- 999,987: Recessionista – Fashion conscious who use the global economic restructuring to their financial benefit.
- 999,986: Zombie Banks – Banks that would be dead if not for government intervention and cash infusion.
- 1,000,001: Financial Tsunami – The global financial restructuring that seemingly swept out of nowhere, wiping out trillions of dollars of assets, in a matter of months


Henry on 10 Jun 2009 at 10:33 am #
Online dictionaries are such a joke. They’re just pandering to people who don’t know how to properly use the language. My personal favorite…
Impactful, as in “That was an impactful speech.”
It’s not a word n00bs. If you use it, I’ll defriend you.
Care/IdeaJump on 24 Jun 2009 at 4:14 am #
Fun! I just yesterday found out what portmanteau means – it’s very startling to see it used. Or did I just ignore it in the past, before I knew what it meant? Hmmmm. Interesting post!