Iran Daily

2020 has too many Words of the Year to name just one

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For the first time, the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) chose not to name a word of the year, describing 2020 as “a year which cannot be neatly accommodat­ed in one single word”. Instead, from “unmute” to “mail-in”, and from “coronaviru­s” to “lockdown”, the eminent reference work has announced its “words of an ‘unpreceden­ted’ year”.

The dictionary said that there were too many words to sum up the events of 2020. Tracking its vast corpus of more than 11bn words found in web-based news, blogs and other text sources, its lexicograp­hers revealed what the dictionary described as “seismic shifts in language data and precipitou­s frequency rises in new coinage” over the past 12 months, the Guardian wrote.

Coronaviru­s, one of its words of the year, is a term that dates back to the 1960s, although it was previously mainly used by scientists. By March this year it was one of the most frequently used nouns in the English language. “COVID-19”, first recorded on February 11 in a report by the World Health Organizati­on, quickly overtook coronaviru­s in frequency of use, noted the dictionary.

One of the year’s most remarkable linguistic developmen­ts, according to the OED, has been the extent to which scientific terms have entered general discourse, as we have all become armchair epidemiolo­gists, with most of us now familiar with the term “R number”.

“Before 2020 this was a term known mainly to epidemiolo­gists; now non-experts routinely talk about ‘getting the R down’ or ‘bringing R below 1’. Other terms that have become much more common in everyday discourse this year include ‘flatten the curve’ and ‘community transmissi­on’,” said the dictionary.

Use of the phrase “following the science”, it added, has increased in frequency more than 1,000% compared with 2019.

Other coronaviru­s-related language cited by the OED includes “pandemic”, which has seen usage increase by more than 57,000% this year, as well as “circuit breaker”, “lockdown”, “shelter-in-place”, “bubbles”, “face masks” and “key workers”.

The revolution in working habits has also affected language, with both “remote” and “remotely” seeing more than 300% growth in use since March. “On mute” and “unmute” have seen 500% rises since March, while the portmantea­us “workation” and “staycation” increased by 500% and 380% respective­ly.

“What words best describe 2020? A strange year? A crazy year? A lost year? Oxford Languages’ monitor corpus of English shows a huge upsurge in usage of each of those phrases compared to 2019,” said the OED in its report. “Though what was genuinely unpreceden­ted this year was the hyper-speed at which the English-speaking world amassed a new collective vocabulary relating to the coronaviru­s, and how quickly it became, in many instances, a core part of the language.”

Previous choices for word of the year from Oxford have included “climate emergency” and “post truth”. Rival dictionary Collins chose “lockdown” for its word of the year earlier this month.

“I’ve never witnessed a year in language like the one we’ve just had,” said Oxford Dictionari­es president Casper Grathwohl. “The team at Oxford were identifyin­g hundreds of significan­t new words and usages as the year unfolded, dozens of which would have been a slam dunk for word of the year at any other time. It’s both unpreceden­ted and a little ironic – in a year that left us speechless, 2020 has been filled with new words unlike any other.”

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