Polarization, Brain Rot and Brat – the 2024 Words of the Year

This year’s choices point to the power, perils and ephemeral nature of digital life

Social media has played a big role in political polarization.
Social media has played a big role in political polarization.
Xavier Lorenzo/Envato
Share
Social media has played a big role in political polarization.
Social media has played a big role in political polarization.
Xavier Lorenzo/Envato
Polarization, Brain Rot and Brat – the 2024 Words of the Year
Copy

Ever since the American Dialect Society selected a Word of the Year at its conference in 1990, over half a dozen English dictionaries have anointed an annual word or phrase that’s meant to encapsulate the zeitgeist of the prior year.

In 2003, the publisher of the Merriam-Webster Dictionary began bestowing a crown. On Dec. 9, 2024, it selected “polarization” as its word of the year, which joins a list of 2024 winners from other dictionaries that include “brat,” “manifest,” “demure,” “brain rot” and “enshittification.”

The terms that are honored are selected in a variety of ways. For example, this year the editors of the Oxford Dictionaries allowed the public to cast votes for their favorite from a short list of candidates. Brain rot emerged victorious.

Other publishers rely on the acumen of their editors, augmented by measures of popularity such as the number of online searches for a particular term.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

Roughly 500 people have signed up for a monthly survey
Three people are dead and three others are wounded after a shooting at the Dennis M. Lynch arena on Monday afternoon, where hockey players from co-operative teams representing several R.I. high schools had a game scheduled.
The mother and adult son were believed to have been living in their car, according to police
Providence, Warwick and New Bedford report rising costs with weeks of winter still ahead
RI judges in the news - and why taking the politics out is difficult
McKenna Goldberg, 75, served nearly 30 years on the state’s top court