With an average of 1,000 words officially accepted every year, the Language Service Industry braces for their tsunami impact both good and bad. I want to make the situation worse…
At the rate that the English language is growing, maybe there’s a societal reason behind it. The Global Language Monitor states that we actually create an average of 5,400 words a year. Most of these are not being used at a wide scale. How does this reflect on us culturally? The effects of rapid modernization forces us to find new words like “metaverse” and “cryptocurrency.” But also, we are a society that easily rejects or quickly evolves our traditional culture. We are re-identifying established words like “aware” with “woke,” or “part time jobs” with “side hustles.”
After some reflection, our tsunami-like word growth has to be due to our insatiability to be a part of the avant-garde, ready to adopt non-traditional language into our lives.
Examples in other countries
I’ll give you an example of why this is not the same in all countries:
When I was doing language training in a tradition-centric Spanish speaking country, we shared the word “ambicioso” for ambitious and “raro” for rare. In that country, those two words had a strong negative connotation when describing people. But in the U.S. the words are generally positive, describing people with a sense of reverence or admiration: “She’s very ambitious with her business.” “He’s a rare breed.” I asked why those words were considered negative and I was told that society looks down upon the avant-garde and out-of-the-box thinkers.
How do we keep up with this pace, even as the English speaking world evolves so rapidly? Well, my answer is to add two more!
I am shocked that the word “evaluee” is not officially accepted. The red spell check line is telling me this now. The evaluation process requires an evaluator and… you get the picture. A Google search shows that it is widely accepted, but it’s not officially accepted.
Also, “circumlocute.” Why do language instructors teach circumlocution, but can’t use it as a verb? We “circumlocute” all the time, when we can’t remember the word we want to use.
Am I part of the avant-garde? I’d like to think so! So, if it is a tsunami of new words entering our vernacular every year, then I guess we all have to learn how to surf it!
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