New York Daily News

For our times, words they are a-changin’

- BY NELSON OLIVEIRA

Dictionary.com is keeping up with the times, announcing the addition of 450 new terms and updates to more than 7,000 entries that touch on the pandemic, race, social justice, identity and culture.

Among the changes is the capitaliza­tion of the word “Indigenous” and the addition of “BIPOC,” an abbreviati­on for Black, Indigenous and people of color — a reflection of how the Black Lives Matter movement has spurred a nationwide reckoning.

The racial justice movement also contribute­d to the popularity of at least three other increasing­ly common words: “overpolice,” a verb used to describe excessivel­y policing or an aggressive response to minor offenses; “racializat­ion,” the act of viewing and interactin­g with people from a racist perspectiv­e, and “disenfranc­hisement,” the act of depriving citizens of their rights, especially the right to vote.

John Kelly, managing editor at Dictionary.com, said the latest round of updates revealed Thursday is unpreceden­ted as the pandemic continues to shake up the English language and force people to update their own vocabulary.

“We haven’t seen anything like the pace and the scope of updating the dictionary like we have seen with coronaviru­s words,” he told the Daily News of new entries such as “supersprea­der.”

The changes are also part of the website’s effort to revamp entries related to race and identity.

“It’s a testament to how deeply as a culture we are thinking about the language of race, identity and marginaliz­ed groups,” he said.

The website decided to remove the noun “slave” when referring to people, replacing it with the adjective “enslaved” or referring to the institutio­n of slavery, a move Kelly described as an effort to represent people with “due dignity and humanity.” An entry for abolitioni­st Harriet Tubman was among those affected.

“What’s the effect of calling Tubman an escaped slave?” Kelly said. “It’s dehumanizi­ng to her and dehumanizi­ng to everyone affected by slavery ... and it fails to hold slavers accountabl­e.”

“Words matter and how definition­s are entered affects real people in the real world,” Kelly told The News.

Several new terms that became popular during the pandemic were also added to the database, including “hybrid learning” and “doomscroll­ing” — the practice of obsessivel­y checking the news and social media feeds in search of updates on negative stories.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States