Binge-watch...
Kangaaaaa! Can doooo....!
The Register is sad to report the rise of Web2.0rhea this morning, after the Oxford Dictionary added words such as tech-savvy, listicle and hyperconnected to its latest online addition. Clickbait, smartwatch, live-tweet and second screen also wheedled their way into the world's most famous lexicon. Oxford's editors explained …
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Nothing beats taking a charabanc to the aerodrome. Makes one feel most awfully a la mode. I'm hanged if I'll let the blighters leave it out of my copy of the OED.
Must dash, I have to wash down the wainscoting and I want to catch a programme on the wireless.
TTFN
"Nothing beats taking a charabanc to the aerodrome."
Oh, this almost sounds like a line from Curly's Airships :-)
"Within a month a million trippers
Came to Cardington to see her,
As she floated at the head of a mast
As tall as Nelson's Column.
The charabancs stacked up, three deep,
Along the Bedford Road,
To watch us joy-riding
The Great and the Good."
'Her' is the R.101, of course...
Pity about them removing cyclogiro as Seoul National University actually has one working. Of course in keeping with the times the university dutifully called it a cyclocopter.
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What if you are reading a story from the 19C and need to know what a wiffleplonk is ? Removign it from the dictionary because it is no longer in everyday use rather defeats the purpose of having a book explaining words you don't use everyday.
The reason for including binge-watch is so that in 100years when we have the plot for TV series automatically downloaded into our iBrain we can understand archaic blog entries from the early C21
It's just two words, both of which are already in the dictionary.
Combining their usage doesn't add more information than was already present.
I eagerly await other combinations of words being added, and of course each and every one of Shakespeare's plays, sonnets etc. should be first.
That should keep them busy for a while.
Reminds me of one when I was in Germany I went to buy a train ticket and my attempt at German was clearly too good as I got a long question in German back. Turned out that it was asking if I was coming back that day (which was a Sunday) as if so I could get a
Sonnertagruktfahrkarten
The German space character shortage continues!
So there's space for this load of cobblers but still no entry for 'tw*tdangler'. I am OUTRAGED I tell you.
And there are people who defend such words because 'English is an evolving language'. Personally if more such words get in, its more of a language in terminal decline. Gah. But then I do write texts in full so maybe its just my age.....
"Each year we get the 'new words' announcement...
...and each year I despair" see title (quoted for truth - is it in the dictionary yet?)
How is FML even a word? It's an initialism for 3 words that are all already well defined and in this combination no specific additional definition seems necessary.
The other entries seem similarly redundant side-boob: the 'side' of a 'boob'. Does anybody fail to understand the meaning of those two words, or their meaning in this specific combination? 'Binge' and 'watch', also take on no additional meaning in the specific combination? I fail to understand why any of these require a specific definition. Or are we now entering all meaningful combinations of words as individual dictionary entries. Not even limited to pairs - FML is 3, YOLO is 4… how far can we take it:
Oxford English dictionary Volume 9847652
(Entire text of Romeo and Juliet)
Pronunciation:
(Entire text of Romeo and Juliet, phonetically)
Play, fiction
Definition:
(Entire text of Romeo and Juliet re-written in modernised English)
Origin
William Shakespeare
I'd think light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation might confuse the average punter - it could be argued that that particular sequence of words can be used to describe a standard lightbulb, perhaps controlled by a dimmer switch (you can amplify it, right?) whereas laser describes a much more specific cohesive light scenario.
I see no such specific additional meaning for FML or YOLO. At least yolo is pronounceable, change FML to effemel and I might agree it is a word. A bollocks made up word not deserving of entry into a dictionary, but a word.
"side boob" is at least 35 years old, as I remember it from school.
I've also seen YOLO in the context "be careful, YOLO (No reload if you die etc.). "Live fast, die young, stay beautiful" is a little more compelling than merely being reckless "I just ordered £40 worth of Chinese food. But YOLO, right?"
I'm pleased to say I've never heard "adorbs". Long may I manage to avoid the yoof types who use such mutant monstrosities.
> Subtly different meanings
> To steal a phrase used by another commentard:
> "Just ordered £40 worth of Chinese food, but YOLO!" Makes sense in a semi-serious "yoof" way
> "Just ordered £40 worth of Chinese food, but Carpe Diem!" Would have to be read as sarcasm.
"Just ordered £40 worth of Chinese food, but Caveat Emptor!" would work better here.
Some of the OED's annual additions are genuine words that will stand the test of time. A few are just teenage grunts that will be an embarrassing memory by Christmas, put in partly for trolling purposes.
OED should put up a list of annual additions/deletions for each year, so we can go back and see what worked and what didn't. Actually, their site has additions year-by-year, but no mention of deletions. Do they see deletion as a failure ?
in the past i've had a chortle at the funny new words.
I dont know whats changed but this time i feel sick.
Some media obsessed adhd twitter jockey kid mustve finished his media studies "degree" and landed a job at the OED. Ive never seen such a string of banal dribble. To even acknowledge the existance of such mind sewer filth as that essex bullshit in the OED is to piss on the union jack. Besides if they were gonna put amazeballs in it should have bee na couple of years ago , its been and gone now
I was somewhat bemused to discover 'neckbeard' is attributed the mouthbreathers from TOWIE. I'm a geordie and have been using it for at least a decade. I suspect it's been around considerably longer than that.
Also, I thought mansplain was something coined by the "social justice" / feminism lot?
>Also, I thought mansplain was something coined by the "social justice" / feminism lot?
That's plausible, given there's no equivalent "chixplain" addition...
"Honey, can I get a courtesy pause on the DVD please? I'd rather binge-watch my way to a piss-drenched sofa than have to let you chixplain the "significant plot-points" of the 30 seconds I'd miss by running to the bog, which apparently include all dialogue and scene-shifts verbatim complete with theories on their significance, what other shows you think you've seen that actress in before, and what amusing thing the cat did in my absence, which will drown out the following 5 minutes of audio and make me wish I'd never asked!"
/aaaaaaand-breathe