Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Dictionary.com's Word of the Year is 'Xenophobia'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2016 11:07 AM
    NEW YORK — You might have thought about it, heard it. A lot. You might have even felt it: Dictionary.com's word of the year is "xenophobia."
     
    While it's difficult to get at exactly why people look words up in dictionaries, online or on paper, it's clear that in contentious 2016, fear of "otherness" bruised the collective consciousness around the globe.
     
    The Brexit vote, police violence against people of colour, Syria's refugee crisis, transsexual rights and the U.S. presidential race were among prominent developments that drove debate — and spikes in lookups of the word, said Jane Solomon, one of the dictionary site's lexicographers.
     
    The 21-year-old site defines xenophobia as "fear or hatred of foreigners, people from different cultures, or strangers." And it plans to expand its entry to include fear or dislike of "customs, dress and cultures of people with backgrounds different from our own," Solomon said in a recent interview.
     
    The word didn't enter the English language until the late 1800s, she said. Its roots are in two Greek words — "xenos," meaning "stranger or guest," and "phobos," meaning "fear or panic," Solomon added.
     
    The interest was clear June 24, within a period that represents the largest spike in lookups of xenophobia so far this year. That was the day of Brexit, when the UK voted to leave the European Union.
     
    Searches for xenophobia on the site increased by 938 per cent from June 22 to June 24, Solomon said. Lookups spiked again that month after President Obama's June 29 speech in which he insisted that Donald Trump's campaign rhetoric was not a measure of "populism," but rather "nativism, or xenophobia, or worse."
     
    Solomon added that chatter about xenophobia goes well beyond the spikes.
     
    "It has been significant throughout the year," she said. "But after the EU referendum, hundreds and hundreds of users were looking up the term every hour."
     
    Robert Reich, who served in the administrations of Presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter and was President Clinton's labour secretary, felt so strongly about xenophobia's prominence today that he appears in a video for Dictionary.com discussing its ramifications.
     
    "I don't think most people even know what xenophobia is," Reich, who teaches public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, said in an interview. "It's a word not to be celebrated but to be deeply concerned about."
     
    Solomon's site, based in Oakland, California, started choosing a word of the year in 2010, based on search data and agreement of in-house experts that include a broad swath of the company, from lexicographers to the marketing and product teams to the CEO, Liz McMillan.
     
    The word and the sentiment reflect a broader mournful tone to 2016, with Oxford dictionary editors choosing "post-truth" as their word of the year, often described in terms of politics as belonging to a time in which truth has become irrelevant.
     
    "I wish," Solomon said, "we could have chosen a word like unicorns."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour
    Infants can smell fear. They learn to detect threats and remember these for long just by smelling the odour their mother gives off when she feels fear, says a study...

    Infants smell threats by mother's odour

    Now, predict first impressions

    Now, predict first impressions
    Now, it is possible to accurately predict first impressions using physical features in everyday facial images such as those found on social media, says a study...

    Now, predict first impressions

    This is why dogs sniff each other's butts

    This is why dogs sniff each other's butts
    You may have witnessed this scene on the road quite often but the answer to why dogs sniff each other's butts is hidden in the chemical communication at the rear end....

    This is why dogs sniff each other's butts

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you
    The behaviours like seeing, smelling and sexual arousal that "come naturally and do not have to be learned" occur because of two classes of pheromone...

    Decoded: What triggers sexual arousal in you

    Stomach most hated body part: Research

    Stomach most hated body part: Research
    Stomachs have been voted the most hated part of the body by the British, followed by love handles and bingo wings, according to new research by non-surgical...

    Stomach most hated body part: Research

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents
    In a survey released Monday, 70 percent of Australian children aged between 8-17, said that their parents did not know about their internet usage...

    Australian children hide internet usage from parents