Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Yeet! Annual list suggests banning ‘optics,’ ‘thought leader,’ ‘collusion’

- By Jeff Karoub

DETROIT — No collusion! (Or at least a lot less of it.)

That’s according to a Michigan school’s latest “List of Words Banished from the Queen’s English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessnes­s.”

The politicall­y charged term at the center of special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into whether President Donald Trump’s campaign coordinate­d with Russia is among 18 entries on Lake Superior State University’s 44th annual list, which was released this week.

University spokesman John Shibley said the school received about 3,000 votes through its website and Facebook pages. Although Trump has repeatedly tweeted that there was “no collusion” and “collusion” was among the top-three vote-getters — along with “wheelhouse and “in the books” — its inclusion should not be interprete­d as a political statement by the list-makers. Rather, voters apparently were just annoyed by hearing and reading the word so often in the past year, he said.

“I can usually read a political nomination when I see it,” he said. “If I saw a string of trolls trying to pack the ballot box for political reasons, I would have caught it.”

The other words or expression­s to make the list are “wrap my head around,” “grapple,” “optics,” “eschew” and “thought leader.” Also submitted by the public for the pyre of popular parlance: “platform,” “ghosting,” “yeet,” “litigate,” “crusty,” “legally drunk,” “importantl­y” and “accoutreme­nts.”

Two other political entries also made it: “Most important election of our time” and “OTUS” acronyms such as POTUS — for President of the United States. The acronyms that have found their way onto cable news shows date back to the late 19th century, when POTUS and SCOTUS (Supreme Court of the United States) were used as telegraph codes, according to Merriam-Webster. FLOTUS, for the first lady, first appeared in the 1980s.

Among the newest terms, yet one the curators feel has outlived its usefulness, is “yeet,” which variously refers to the name of a dance, a taunt, an excited acknowledg­ment or throwing something. Other words are commonly known in one setting, such as “litigate” among lawyers, but get trotted out by some politician­s and pundits for hashing out “any matter of controvers­y,” according to one submission.

Another Michigan school takes the opposite approach: Detroit’s Wayne State University attempts through its Word Warriors campaign to exhume worthy words that have fallen out of favor. This year’s list included “couth,” “compunctio­n,” and “nugatory,” which doesn’t describe the creamy candy known as nougat but means “no value or importance.”

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