海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Merriam-Webster's plea: It's not too late to block 'fascism' as word of the year

The Merriam-Webster dictionary Tweeted earlier this week that 'fascism' is the most looked-up word so far in 2016, making it likely to become the word of the year.

By Zhai Yun Tan, Staff

By the end of December, the word fascism could end up being the 鈥淲ord of the Year鈥 crowned by Merriam-Webster based on the number of searches it received over the year.

But the dictionary company joked on Twitter earlier this week that if its followers don鈥檛 want this year to be remembered by the negative word, it鈥檚 not too late to change it.

Its Twitter followers took the plea seriously, resulting in flummadiddle and puppy becoming trending searches since Thursday, although the company also admitted that despite frantic searches now, the new trending words might not overtake聽fascism聽this year.

Other insults and related words 聽including bigot, xenophobe, racism, and 尘颈蝉辞驳测苍测听鈥撀all used in reference to President-elect Donald Trump during this election season 鈥 also climbed this year's list of most-searched terms, as 海角大神 reported after the elections.

Having these strongly negative terms define a year might not be such a bad thing, say observers. It could be viewed as a sign of engagement 鈥撀爋f people being politically invested enough to seek out knowledge.

鈥淧eople should look up fascism,鈥 wrote Merriam-Webster staff in a Trend Watch article. 鈥淎s with any other word in the dictionary, we want people to know what fascism 尘别补苍蝉.鈥

If you want to know what it means but don't want to add to its look-up statistics, here's Merriam-Webster's definition: "a political philosophy, movement, or regime (as that of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition."

According to the dictionary's staff, words such as fascism and socialism are perennial favorites, but the former saw a spike of 450 percent in searches since last year.聽

Pete Sokolowski, lexicographer of the Merriam-Webster dictionary, argued after the elections in a series of Tweets that interest in the words indicate curiosity, not ignorance, and that people may feel 鈥渞esponsible to know what it 尘别补苍蝉.鈥 As he told the Monitor in November, 鈥渢he dictionary look-ups represent what people are thinking.鈥

But if a surge in look-ups signal increased curiosity instead of ignorance, as Mr. Sokolowski argues, it runs counter to the word that the England-based Oxford Dictionary chose as their Word of the Year: Post-truth, defined as 鈥渞elating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.鈥

As the Monitor previously reported, a聽post-truth聽paradigm helps understand how emotional appeals influenced the Brexit vote聽in England and the election of Mr. Trump, even after critics have pointed out the candidate鈥檚 numerous factual errors and policy inconsistencies.

The Merriam-Webster word of the year depends on how often a word is searched in one particular year and in comparison to previous years. While fascism is popular, the company is still crunching data for this year and has not come to a conclusion about the word of the year yet.聽

In the meantime, Merriam-Webster intended its plea as a relief for those tired of all the political talk of 2016, writing that 鈥渨e need a break from fascism鈥 in its article, followed by pictures of puppies and a post about the newly trending word flummadiddle.

A flummadiddle, by the way, is 鈥渟omething foolish or worthless.鈥