Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘Youthquake’ in 2017 leaves mark

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OXFORD Dictionari­es recognised the power of the millennial generation yesterday with its 2017 word of the year: youthquake.

Oxford lexicograp­hers say there was a fivefold increase in use of the term between 2016 and 2017.

It is defined as “a significan­t cultural, political, or social change arising from the actions or influence of young people”.

The word, coined almost 50 years ago by thenVogue editor Diana Vreeland, has been used to describe phenomena including surging youth support for Britain’s Labour Party and the election of 30-something leaders in France and New Zealand.

Each year, Oxford University Press tracks how the English language is changing and chooses a word that reflects the annual mood.

Oxford Dictionari­es president Casper Grathwohl said youthquake has “yet to land firmly on American soil, but strong evidence in the UK calls it out as a word on the move”.

Runners-up included broflake – a man who is readily upset or offended by progressiv­e attitudes that conflict with his views – and kompromat, a Russian term for compromisi­ng informatio­n collected for political leverage.

Oxford Dictionari­es consultant Susie Dent said many of the year’s stand-out words “speak to fractured times of mistrust and frustratio­n”.

“In ‘youthquake’ we find some hope in the power to change things, and had a little bit of linguistic fun along the way. It feels like the right note on which to end a difficult and divisive year.”

“Post-truth” was 2016’s word of the year. – AP

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