Top Words of the Decade ('Google' Wins)
All the best words of the last 10 years.
Want to find something out on the internet? Trying to dig up the answer to a question that's been bugging you all day? You google it, of course!
For that reason, and due to the massive success of Google's search technology, the American Dialect Society has named "google" its word of the decade.
Are you having a sandwich? Do you want to tell the whole world what kind of sandwich it is? You tweet it, of course.
For that reason, and due to the massive growth of Twitter in 2009, "tweet" is the American Dialect Society's word of the year.
"Both words are, in the end, products of the Information Age, where every person has the ability
to satisfy curiosity and to broadcast to a select following, both via the Internet." Barrett said. "I really thought blog would take the honors in the word of the decade category, but more people google than blog, don’t they? Plus, many people think ‘blog’ just sounds ugly. Maybe Google’s trademark lawyers would have preferred it, anyway."
Check out the full list below:
AMERICAN DIALECT SOCIETY VOTE TALLIES
The number after each nomination is the number of votes it received. Numbers separated by slash marks indicate a run-off. Voting totals are for each category might not be identical because the number of voters might have changed for each category.
WORD OF THE YEAR WINNER: tweet, noun, a short message sent via the Twitter.com service, and verb, the act of sending such a message. 69
Other nominees for word of the year:
-er A suffix used in such words as birther, someone who questions whether Obama was born in the United States; deather, someone who believes the government has death panels in its healthcare reform plan; Tenther, someone who believes the Federal government is mostly illegal because it usurps rights which belong to the States, in violation of the 10th Amendment; and truther, someone who doubts the official account of the 9/11 attacks. 6
fail A noun or interjection describing something egregiously unsuccessful. Usually used as an interjection:
“FAIL!” 34
H1N1 The virus that causes swine flu. 14
public option A government-run healthcare insurance program, desired by some to be part of the country’s healthcare reform. 5
Dracula sneeze Covering one’s mouth with the crook of one’s elbow when sneezing, seen as similar to popular portrayals of the vampire Dracula, in which he hides the lower half of his face with a cape. 1
WORD OF THE DECADE WINNER: google Verb meaning “to search the Internet.” Generic form of the trademarked “Google,” the world’s dominant Internet search engine. 74
Other nominees for word of the decade:
9/11 The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Pronounced “nine eleven.” 16
blog A web site for publishing a chronological and ongoing series of related entries, especially when they are all by the same person(s) or on the same topic. Also a productive combining form: blogosphere, blogerati, milblog, blogola. 31
green Related to ecological or environmental conservation or protection. Also a productive combining form: greenwashing, green collar, etc. 1
text Verb: to send a text message via a mobile phone. Noun: such a message. 1
war on terror A global effort to prevent terror and terrorists. 0
Wi-Fi abbreviation. Wireless Fidelity, a group of technical standards enabling the transmission of data over wireless networks. 2
—MOST USEFUL—
WINNER: fail A noun or interjection used when something is egregiously unsuccessful. Usually written as
“FAIL!” 78
-er A suffix used in such words as birther, someone who questions whether Obama was born in the United States; deather, someone who believes the government has death panels in its healthcare reform plan; Tenther, someone who believes the Federal government is mostly illegal because it usurps rights which belong to the States, in violation of the 10th Amendment; and truther, someone who doubts the official account of the 9/11 attacks. 40
rogue Someone who acts in an unexpected way.
un- As prefix used in some online verbs: unfriend, unfollow, unlike, unfavorite, untag, etc. 4
—MOST CREATIVE—
American Dialect Society: Words of the Year 3
WINNER: Dracula sneeze: Covering one’s mouth with the crook of one’s elbow when sneezing, seen as similar to popular portrayals of the vampire Dracula, in which he hides the lower half of his face with a cape. 60
botax A proposed levy which would be charged on cosmetic procedures and surgeries. It would be used to help pay for healthcare reform. A play on Botox, a trade name for a substance used to smooth skin wrinkles. 18
bragabond: A person who travels a lot and brags about it a lot. 11
Kanye interruptus An important speech or event that is interrupted. Also, to kanye, to interrupt someone else’s speech.
—MOST UNNECESSARY—
WINNER: sea kittens fish (according to PETA) 50/60
birther A person who believes Barack Obama was not born in the United States and, therefore, is disqualified to be president. 3
micronumerosity The state of having too small a sample of data. micro + numerosity state of being numerous; numerousness. ca1991. 7
Octomom Nadya Suleman, who gave birth to octuplets in January. 45/46
Salahi To gate-crash. Named after Tareq and Michaele Salahi, who visited a White House event without an invitation. 5
—MOST OUTRAGEOUS—
WINNER: death panel A supposed committee of doctors and/or bureaucrats who would decide which patients were allowed to receive treatment, ostensibly leaving the rest to die. 77
sexting The sending of sexual messages or pictures by mobile telephone. 0
teabagger A derogatory name for attendees of Tea Parties, an organized gathering of anti-tax, anti-government, and/or anti- Obama protestors. 24
underpants bomber/pants bomber/ crotch bomber/panty bomber/eunuch bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian man who tried to blow up a passenger plane over Detroit on Christmas Day using a liquid bomb in his underwear. 0
—MOST EUPHEMISTIC—
WINNER: hike the Appalachian trail To go away to have sex with one’s illicit lover. Follows on a statement by South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, who went to Argentina to visit his mistress. 120
public option (explanation above) 0
sea kittens Fish, as coined by PETA. 2
—MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED—
WINNER: twenty-ten A pronunciation of the year 2010, as opposed to saying “two thousand ten” or “two thousand and ten.” (twenty- as prefix until 2099) 121
charging station A place where electric cars recharge their batteries. 13
green shoots Signs of a country’s economic recovery or of a company’s financial turnaround. Widely used in the UK during the 1990’s, but now spread to the rest of the English-speaking world. 0
-er suffix as in birther, deather, truther 3
—LEAST LIKELY TO SUCCEED—
WINNER: Any name of the decade 2000-2009, such as Naughties, Aughties, Oughties, etc. 45/59
Poliwood Stars who are political. 34/48
slow media Newspapers and other paper-based periodicals. 8
tether To connect a laptop to a cellphone for Internet access. 4
oh-ten name for the year 2010. 1
sea kittens fish. 14
- Bank Robbers Foiled By GPS Hidden in Cash
- Cell Phone Use Could Prevent/Treat Alzheimer's
- 3D Camcorder is Somewhat Affordable
- LG's $10K Full HD 3D Projector Ships Soon
- Xbox Live for Mobile is Windows-Based Only
- Tweets Become Key Evidence in Murder Case
- Able Planet's Gaming Headset Gets a New Twist
- Ron Jeremy: Games Worse for Kids Than Porn
- Phishing Attack Launched from Android Market
- Who Should Nexus One Users Go to for Support?
- Lenovo Debuts Android Smartphone, LePhone
- Report: Iranian Cyber Army Takes Down Baidu
- Newsweek: Microsoft Pushing Steve Ballmer Out
- Next-Gen, Dual-Core iPhone May Appear in April
- Burglars Caught By Pic Taken on Stolen Phone
- Facebook Employee: Site Tracks Your Every Move
- iPhone Wins Smartphone Touchscreen Shootout
- RCA Charger Draws Electricity from Wi-Fi Signals




Tweet? Really?
"Dracula sneeze" FTW!!!!
oh god
this article seems a little confusing.
FAIL WON!!!
The rest of this list is fail...
...why does sea kittens get mentioned in every damn category?
FAIL.
lol i loved the "Dracula sneeze". Never actually used it but that sounds pretty awesome haha
Here's one they forgot:
-fag. A suffix used on internet chat forums after an adjective as a derogatory (but not hateful) term for another user.
E.g. newfag, samefag.
...why does sea kittens get mentioned in every damn category?
Because die in hell PETA
i think fag and gay should be added with how they are used in todays vernacular, along with pawned.
P.S DRACULA SNEEZE FTW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I just hope 2009 was the year of "tweet" and we NEVER hear it again, what a stupid fad that was...my god.
i think fag and gay should be added with how they are used in todays vernacular, along with pawned.P.S DRACULA SNEEZE FTW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
i think you mean PWND not pawned = when you sell shit at a pawn shop.
Teabagger? I think that may have another meaning....
I want 5 minutes of my life back! (So I can go watch teabagging videos)
yeah when I saw teabagger I thought it was going to be the act of dropping the nuts in someones mouth.
i hate google , it is NOT a verb it is a name of a company , i never have nor will i ever use that evil companies name as a verb. and what's up witht he teabagger definition what morons came up with that eery one knows teabagger is some one that goes around squating thier chars over fallen oponents in various online games (aka teabagging thier virtual nuts on thier beaten oponent)
I dunno about you guys...but I think "sea-kittens" is how I'm gonna refer to fish from now on. "Let's go hunt some sea-kittens!"
..."teabagger"...amusing...never heard of that definition before.
I'll have to remember the "dracula sneeze". I only started noticing this more in public after H1N1 scare started.
Too bad "fail" didn't beat out "tweet".
Jeez. Twitter is so pointless. So much so, that I'd like to downgrade that word to "Twatter." xD