All in a day’s twerk
( twerk, v: dance to popular music in a sexually provocative manner involving thrusting hip movements and a low, squatting stance)
TWERKING, the rump-busting up-and-down dance move long beloved on the hip-hop scene in the US, has officially gone mainstream. It has got the English dictionary entry to prove it.
Britain’s Oxford Dictionaries said the rapid-fire gyrations employed by US pop starlet Miley Cyrus to bounce her way to the top of the charts had become increasingly visible in the past 12 months and would be added to its publications under the entry: “Twerk, verb.”
Although Cyrus’s eye-popping moves at Monday’s MTV Video Music Awards may have been many viewers’ first introduction to the practice, Oxford Dictionaries’ Katherine Connor Martin said “twerking” was some two decades old.
“There are many theories about the origin of this word,” Martin said. “We think the most likely theory is that it is an alteration of ‘ work’, because that word has a history of being used in similar ways, with dancers being encouraged to ‘work it’. The ‘t’ could be a result of blending with another word
We think the most likely theory is that it is an alteration of ’work’, because that word has a history of being used in similar ways, with dancers being encouraged to ‘work it’
such as twist or twitch.”
“Twerk” will be added to the dictionary as part of its quarterly update, which includes words such as “selfie”, used to describe pouty smartphone selfportraits, and “digital detox” for time spent away from Facebook and Twitter.
Oxford Dictionaries is responsible for a range of reference works, including Oxford Dictionaries Online, which focuses on modern usage, and the historically focused Oxford English Dictionary, which probably will not be adding “twerk” to its venerable pages any time soon. — AP