‘Lockdown’ named word of the year, beating ‘BLM’, ‘Megxit’ and ‘ TikToker’ for the top spot
It’s a word that until this year would have most likely been associated with being in prison, but it has grown in resonance since staying in our homes became the new normal as Covid-19 has swept across the globe.
Now, lockdown has been named as the word of the year by Collins English Dictionary, which defines it as: “The imposition of stringent restrictions on travel, social interaction and access to public spaces.”
Lexicographers registered more than 250,000 usages of lockdown this year, compared with 4,000 last year. “Language is a reflection of the world around us and 2020 has been dominated by the global pandemic,” said Helen Newstead, a language content consultant at Collins. “We have chosen lockdown as our word of the year because it encapsulates the shared experience of billions of people who have had to restrict their daily lives in order to contain the virus.
“Lockdown has affected the way we work, study, shop and socialise. With many countries entering a second lockdown, it is not a word of the year to celebrate but it is, perhaps, one that sums up the year for most of the world.”
Lockdown can also take credit for spawning its own microcosm of lexicography, such as turning Zoom into a verb, as in: “Shall we Zoom later?”
Lockdown had some competition to be crowned word of the year. TikToker was a frontrunner, describing someone who is active on the social media app TikTok. As was Megxit, the term used to describe Prince Harry and Meghan stepping down from their roles as senior British royals. BLM, the acronym for Black Lives Matter, was another finalist, along with coronavirus, a word that appears at least once in most people’s daily vocabulary.
Another contender was Mukbang, which, like the world-dominating boy band BTS, originates from South Korea. It’s the word used to describe videos posted online of people eating huge amounts of food.
“Lockdown, with its heavy, clunking syllables and heavier associations, is the condition we’ve most dreaded in 2020 – a state of national stasis, where almost everything that constitutes normal public life is suspended,” writes David Shariatmadari, author of Don’t Believe A Word: From Myths to Misunderstandings – How Language Really Works.
“It’s not a shock to remember that lockdown was originally a piece of prison vocabulary: it’s when inmates are confined to their cells because of some disturbance on the wing. 2020 is the year that the meaning of the word shifted irrevocably: in most people’s minds, lockdown is now a public health measure.”