The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pandemic inspires a panoply of names

Comiing up with ii nnew nick names is a online trend..

- By Evan Nicole Brown c.2021 New York Times

You probably didn’t realize how many words begin with the prefix “pan-” until we found ourselves living through a pan … demic. On social media, we are in a “panorama,” a “pandemoniu­m,” a “pandemi moore,” a “panini.”

Over the past year, a new lexicon has emerged online: “quarantini­s” to describe at-home cocktails in quarantine; “stimmy” for stimulus checks; “doom scrolling” for your inability to go offline. These humorous phrases make intimidati­ngly scientific and medical jargon more accessible, and shorter versions of words often become useful because they are easily and quickly verbalized. Most of all, humor can be an important tool for processing these trying times. (A 15-year followup study of 53,556 participan­ts from Norway found that having a sense of humor is also associated with living longer.)

“We’re manipulati­ng the structure of the word,” said Adrienne R. Washington, a professor of sociocultu­ral linguistic­s at Norfolk State University in Virginia. “We’re dropping syllables, like with ‘Rona,’ or sometimes we make them into diminutive­s, which are words that are more familiar or maybe even endearing.”

Washington noted: “A diminutive makes something less grave than the original terms.”

There’s also taking it to the level of art. Hunter Harris, a freelance writer, has pioneered, on social media and in Hung Up, her newsletter, the “pandemi cup bra,” “Jonathan pandemme” and “pandeuxmoi.”

“You just have to kind of retreat into the most blasé or playful language because the actual tragedy of it is too much,” she said. “It’s also just like a funny brain puzzle to think about what words can mutate into becoming pandemic.”

There is a formula for writing a tweet that gets maximum retweet value. Sometimes, the winning formula can be piling onto whatever funny meme format is circulatin­g that week. That creates a collaborat­ive aspect of virality — meaning that this linguistic joke can’t be credited to any one person. It’s everyone’s creation.

A large part of this meme’s success is owed to Black Twitter,

which Washington described as “a virtual community” but also a linguistic one, marked, in part, by “collaborat­ive journalism.” Much like Africaname­rican Vernacular English, or “Black speech,” allows Black Americans to distinguis­h themselves from their counterpar­ts through the use of culturally specific phrases and references, Black Twitter “often gives us the language to make sense of different realities,” Washington said.

For Black Americans, some of these different realities can be traumatic and even fatal.

Levity is frequently used as a way to minimize the weight of events that feel too heavy to hold.

One use of Black Twitter has become an opportunit­y for Black Americans to participat­e in a public, collective grieving process in realtime. Its cultural relevance has influenced the active participat­ion of others, one joke building off the previous, making this particular style of linguistic meme popular across additional communitie­s online.

“It’s something that we all have in common,” said Harris. “And the internet, and Twitter specifical­ly, is mostly a place to talk about things in a lightheart­ed, clever, funny way — or at least those are the jokes that perform the best.”

When Ayana Lage, a fulltime marketing freelancer in Tampa, Florida, first came across pandemic-renaming on Twitter, it was in response to a group photograph taken on vacation that wasn’t following travel or social distancing protocol.

“Someone said: ‘In a panorama?’ And it stopped me in my tracks. Then the replies were people riffing off of each other,” Lage said. “At one point — a low point — I did Google ‘words that start with P’ because I wanted to up my arsenal,” she added, and laughed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States