The Borneo Post

‘Surreal’ is named 2016 ‘Word of the Year’

-

WASHINGTON: Donald Trump's upset win in the US presidenti­al election astonished people so much that they rushed to the dictionary to look up the word everyone was using to describe the event: surreal.

Indeed, Merriam-Webster's dictionary on Monday named surreal its Word of the Year 2016, the honor given to the word or term with the sharpest spike in look-ups over the previous year.

Surreal, definition: “marked by the intense irrational reality of a dream.” It actually triggered not one but a series of sudden jumps in people looking it up.

The first came after terrorist bombings in Brussels in March. Thirty-two people died, as did three attackers.

It happened again in July after the coup attempt in Turkey and the terrorist attack in Nice, France in which a man driving a truck swerved back and forth through a crowd watching Bastille Day fireworks, crushing 86 people to death.

But the biggest spike came after Trump – the tweeting, shootfromt­he-hip political neophyte and property tycoon who insulted women, minorities and Muslims during the campaign – defeated Hillary Clinton during the November 8 race for the White House.

“When we don't believe or don't want to believe what is real, we need a word for what seems ‘above' or ‘beyond' reality. Surreal is such a word,” the dictionary company said in a statement.

It said another word looked up big-time in 2016 was ‘bigly.'

“Donald Trump used the term ‘ big league' in an unusual way, as an adverb during a debate, and many people thought he said ‘ bigly',” said Merriam-Webster editor-at-large Peter Sokolowski.

Bigly actually is in the dictionary, and means in great scope, or with a blustering manner.

Clinton's use of ‘deplorable' as a plural noun to describe some of Trump's supporters – ‘a basket of deplorable­s' – was also a top trending word for 2016, MerriamWeb­ster said. — AFP

 ??  ?? This photo illustrati­on taken in Washington, DC shows the definition for the word ‘Surreal’ in a copy of the Webster’s Desktop Dictionary. — AFP photo
This photo illustrati­on taken in Washington, DC shows the definition for the word ‘Surreal’ in a copy of the Webster’s Desktop Dictionary. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia