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Has Google Made Dictionaries Obsolete?

Try hard to remember the last time you picked up a dictionary. (You know, that big, old dusty book with gold-leaf on the cover.) For those who've grown up in the 'Age of Google,' it might be hard to recall. Because, with a few keystrokes and a click of a button, a search engine can retrieve the definition of any word, not only in the English language, but many others, too.

According to The Wall Street Journal, dictionaries, which are essentially massive databases, have been eclipsed by Google's ability to provide a quick definition, spelling, and examples of word usage in nanoseconds. Often, the definition appears just by reading the two-sentence summaries on the search results page, no visit to an online dictionary necessary. However, the Journal isn't calling for the burning of all print dictionaries -- they're still useful if you're looking for obscure usages and etymologies.

The real beef here is with dictionaries, period. Unclear or outdated definitions, and a dearth of example sentences plague both print and online versions. For some reason, despite the freedom the Web offers, lexicographers haven't figured out how to make online dictionaries dynamic and up-to-date databases. Until someone figures out how to use them, we'll just have to consult the 'Google-nary' for our language needs. [From: The Wall Street Journal]

Video Games, Google, Web, Social Networking

Could 'Noob' or 'Defriend' Be the One-Millionth English Word?


The English language is about to pass a historic milestone, at least according to the Global Language Monitor, a group that monitors language. The one millionth English word is nearly upon us. What this will be isn't known yet, but in the running are a number of words straight from the Internet, including "defriend" and "noob."

The standard used by the Global Language monitor requires that the word show up in the media and on social networking sites 25,000 times before it is considered a part of the language, but that doesn't necessarily mean it'll be showing up in your copy of the Unabridged Webster's Dictionary anytime soon.

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Computers

'Overshare' Announced as Webster's Word of the Year



The editors of Webster's New World dictionary have announced 'overshare' as the Word of the Year, reports Urlesque.

In the above video, Mike Agnes, the dictionary's Editor in Chief defines 'overshare' thusly:
Typically a verb, but also used as a noun, it is the name given to 'too much information,' whether willingly offered or inadvertently revealed. It is the word for both the tedious minutiae on personal Web sites and blogs, and the accidental slips of the tongue in public.
'Overshare' emerged as the victor from a list including four other finalists: 'leisure sickness,' 'cyberchondriac,' 'selective ignorance' and 'youthanasia.'

Agnes explains that Webster's decision to crown the word springs from its application as both noun and verb and its pertinence to digital media and emergent forms of public discourse.

While the word is not yet sufficiently part of the English lexicon to earn a place in the dictionary, Agnes explains that the dictionary's editors are keeping a close eye on its development. [From: Urlesque]

Computers

'w00t' is WOTY (Word Of The Year)

'w00t' is WOTY (Word Of The Year)

If you had to pick a single notable word that stands out in your mind from 2007, what would be it? It's okay, take your time. This probably isn't the sort of question you ponder on a daily basis -- or perhaps ever. But, among dictionary-types, it's a (mildly) prestigious honor to be nominated word of this year, and this year that honor has been granted to a string of four characters that many would not even consider a word in the first place.

That thing is 'w00t,' spelled w-zero-zero-t and pronounced "whoot." It's an exclamation of joy that originated in the various realms of offline role-playing games like Dungeons and Dragons, where it originally meant "Wow, loot!" It has since gained use in online RPGs (role-playing games) like 'World of Warcraft,' and from there has gone on to conquer the world -- at least according to Merriam-Webster, which handled the nomination. The zeros were added in to make it cooler for the kiddies who like numbers that look like letters.

Other, perhaps more stuffy, literary types believe that the nomination is just as bogus as the word itself, but last year's Colbert-inspired word of the year, "truthiness," isn't exactly grammatically correct either. Whether it's a real word or not we don't care, but we can't help but appreciate the amazing rise of a little word that grew from basement D&D play all the way up to common parlance.

The other tech-related term on Merriam-Webster "word of the year" list is "Facebook," as a verb.

What do you think? Are these kinds of made-up words worthy of word-of-the-year lists by such venerable English-language institutions such as Merriam-Webster?

From wbsctv.com and AOL News


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