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.

Special election on Tuesday will fill the unexpired term of the late Senate President Dominick Ruggerio
A visit to Vineyard Wind 1 raises questions about the company’s claims, with far fewer turbines spinning than reported and little explanation from project leaders
Ruling affirms state law that limits open-carry permits to those who can show a specific need
Meg Disanto, 42-year-old Providence resident, says the bridge traffic got so bad that she decided to have her kids change schools
Pope recognizes first miracle of his papacy, crediting prayers to a 19th-century Spanish priest for reviving an infant at a Pawtucket hospital