List of American Dialect Society's Words of the Year

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The American Dialect Society's Word of the Year (WotY[a]) are voted at the January American Dialect Society conference. The first year for which the word of the year was voted ("bushlips") by the ADS was 1990.[2]

Sam Corbin, a words and language writer for The New York Times, comparing the ADS WOTY with the likes from prominent dictionaries, wrote that "the American Dialect Society celebrates linguistic variation to an almost absurd degree".[1]

Starting with about 30 society members in early years, as of 2023 the vote drew some 300 participants. Recently the event consists of two parts: the live nominating session, which culls the nominations open to public a month in advance, and the live vote.[1]

2023[edit]

  • Word of the Year: enshittification[1]
  • Most useful/Most likely to succeed: (derogatory): parenthetical comment humorously appended after a word that might not be expected to be derogatory
  • Political Word of the Year: 🍉 (watermelon emoji): symbol of Palestinian solidarity used on social media
  • Digital Word of the Year: enshittification
  • Informal Word of the Year: "let (someone) cook": allow (someone) to do something that they are good at without interference
  • Acronym/Initialism of the Year: FAFO (fuck around and find out): warning that foolish actions will result in unwanted consequences
  • AI-related Word of the Year: stochastic parrot
  • Most Creative Word of the Year: Kenaissance: renaissance in the wake of the Barbie movie’s depiction of Ken
  • Euphemism of the Year: "structurally restrictive housing": solitary confinement (rebranded by the New York City Department of Correction)

2022[edit]

2005[edit]

1990[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ WotY is pronounced as "WHOA-tea"[1]

References[edit]