Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Spoiler alert: Hip-pop jumps into Oxford English Dictionary

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK — From the positively medieval to the beat of contempora­ry music: Brencheese, deathshild­y and hip-pop are among about 1,000 new or refreshed entries added in June to the online Oxford English Dictionary.

The additions are part of the company’s quarterly update of its searchable subscripti­on website, Oed.com. The dictionary’s 20volume third edition in print has been in process since 2000 and likely won’t be ready for more than a decade, said Katherine Connor Martin, who heads U.S. dictionary operations.

Generally, the OED tracks usage for at least 10 years before deciding whether to add a new entry, new definition or word related to an existing entry, she said. The rule of thumb is sometimes not followed, as in the case of “tweet,” which was added well before that benchmark. But the OED has other roles as well.

“It’s funny because we talk about new words but many of the words we add are already obsolete. It’s just that they were never in the dictionary before,” Martin said.

That, she noted, is the nature of a historical dictionary looking to put more than 1,000 years of English into context in volumes already stuffed with more than 855,000 words, senses and compounds. Hence, brencheese, a rare reference to bread and cheese when eaten together. It stretches back to 1665. The word deathshild­y references Old English for someone guilty of a capital crime and condemned to death.

On the more recent front: hip-pop, for music that combines elements of hiphop and pop. The OED found a 1985 reference in a Pennsylvan­ia newspaper to “hip-hip pop,” and a 1991 reference in a Florida newspaper to M.C. Hammer’s “hip-pop.”

Along with the ancient esoterics are some cultural obligation­s: binge-watching, spoiler alert and microaggre­ssion, all buzzy today.

Impostor syndrome: It dates to 1982, when Vogue magazine ran a story about women who felt they were suffering from “impostor phenomenon,” a term used by psychologi­sts for the “persistent inability to believe that one’s success is deserved or has been legitimate­ly achieved as a result of one’s own efforts or skills.” Silent generation: There’s the greatest generation, generally describing people who reached adulthood during World War II (1939-45). The silent generation, Martin said, describes “people born before that of the baby boomers,” spanning roughly the mid-1920s to the mid-1940s. They’re “perceived as tending towards conformism or restraint in their outlook and behaviour,” according to the new dictionary entry. Time magazine used the term in a 1951 cover story.

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