Thursday, February 5, 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

    Love Happens At Fourth Sight, Not First

    Love Happens At Fourth Sight, Not First
    Love at first sight is a myth - and lovers need to meet at least four times before Cupid's arrow strikes their hearts, said a study.

    Love Happens At Fourth Sight, Not First

    Chinese Parents Are Taking Kids as Young as Three to 'CEO Training Courses'

    Chinese Parents Are Taking Kids as Young as Three to 'CEO Training Courses'
    In a bid to give their children a head start in life, wealthy Chinese parents are enrolling them in all kinds of early education programs, including CEO training courses.

    Chinese Parents Are Taking Kids as Young as Three to 'CEO Training Courses'

    Meet This Self-Proclaimed Vampire Who Drinks Blood and Sleeps in a Coffin

    Meet This Self-Proclaimed Vampire Who Drinks Blood and Sleeps in a Coffin
    Darkness Vlad Tepes, a young Englishman who has been living as a vampire for the last 13 years, says he is regularly bullied for his different lifestyle and just wants to be treated as a normal person.

    Meet This Self-Proclaimed Vampire Who Drinks Blood and Sleeps in a Coffin

    This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain

    This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain
    Located 6,463 feet above sea level in the middle of the Swiss Alps, the Null Stern concept hotel takes the minimalist approach to the extreme, removing the walls, roof, basic amenities like toilets and leaving guests with just a king-size bed and a stunning 360-degree view to admire.

    This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain

    Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy

    Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy
    One of these sold-out toys actually went for as much as 350 dollars on eBay, while thousands of parents are on a waiting list

    Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy

    Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled

    Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled
    Her mother is desperate to help, but doctors aren't even sure what is causing the unusual sneezing bouts.

    Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled