Copyright © Françoise Herrmann
Celebrating 20 years of WOTTIES, Oxford is calling on the public to vote for the 2024 Word of the Year (WOTY). As Susie Dent, Oxford resident dictionary expert, lexicographer, etymologist, Two Words game designer, and multiple-book author puts it:
The choice is yours! There is no committee presiding over our language. It is a democracy. As much as some would like a linguistic government. We all are it.
Voting is open till November 28, 2024, at 3 pm (GMT). Click on the QR code to vote!
The following summarized definitions and rationales are quoted at the Oxford Dictionary site for the six 2024 WOTY candidates:
dynamic pricing: The practice of varying prices for a product or service to reflect changing market conditions, in particular, the charging of a higher price at a time of greater demand. According to Oxford, the term is a loan translation from the Swedish term “dynamiska prisbildning”. The term was coined by a Swedish economist, Gunnar Myrdal, in 1927, and then translated to English, in 1929, by another Swedish economist, named Erik Lindahl. Recently, the term has spiked in high profile cases of online sales, involving the price of concert tickets.
demure (adjective): Of a person, reserved or restrained in appearance or behavior. Of clothing, not showy, ostentatious or overly revealing. The earliest occurrence recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary, in 1377, was in reference to the sea being calm. Oxford recorded a recent spike, in 2024, after the term was used by Jools Lebron, a fierce diva influencer on TikTok.
lore: A body of (supposed) facts, background information, and anecdotes relating to someone or something, regarded as knowledge required for full understanding or informed discussion of the subject at hand. According to Oxford observations, the term has been used recently in more engaged fandoms to refer to what surrounds a celebrity, book, film or character.
brain rot: Supposed deterioration of a person’s mental or intellectual state, especially as a result of overconsumption of material (now particularly online content) considered to be trivial or unchallenging. Also something characterized as leading to such deterioration. In the Oxford corpus, recorded usage increased 250% in frequency, per one million words, between 2023 and 2024.
slop: Art, writing, or other content generated using AI, shared and distributed online in a indiscriminate or intrusive way, and characterized as being of low quality, inauthentic, or inaccurate. According to Oxford, the term appeared in use since the mid-nineteenth century to refer to nonsense or rubbish. In 2024, Oxford recorded a 332% increase in use of “slop” to refer to material produced by LLMs. Material seen as inaccurate or low quality, and increasingly visible.
romantasy: A genre of fiction combining elements of romantic fiction and fantasy, typically featuring themes of magic, the supernatural, or adventure alongside a central romantic storyline. According to Oxford, the word originates, in 2008, at Random House Germany, as a translated genre label, from German, for romantic fantasy novels. In 2024, usage spiked in discussions at the BookTok forum, on Tiktok.
References
Oxford WOTY 2024 (YouTube video)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwKnx07Bsco
Dent, S. (2024). Guilty by Definition: A Journey of Oxford past and present. London, UK: John Murray.
----- (2023). Interesting Stories about Curious Words: From Stealing Thunder to Red Herrings. London, UK: John Murray.
----- (2022). Words from the Heart: An Emotional Dictionary. London, UK: John Murray.
----- (2020). Word Perfect: Etymological Entertainment Every Day. London, UK: John Murray.
----- (2016). Modern Tribes: The Secret Languages of Britain. London, UK: John Murray.
----- (2009). What made the crocodile cry? 101 Questions about the English Language. London UK: John Murray.
-----(2008). Words of the Year. London, UK: John Murray.
Susie Dent (Instagram)
https://www.instagram.com/susiedent/reel/DCY8Q3esUFA/
Susie Dent -That woman in the Dictionary Corner. (on X)
https://x.com/susie_dent?lang=en
Two Words with Susie Dent (Online and mobile game.)