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
1 min read
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.

Supporters say the current political climate has made their work helping immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers more vital and more difficult
Pay raises delayed by state payroll system cloud conversion should happen soon
Personnel decisions in city’s schools highlight power struggle in state takeover
Agents used a battering ram to enter a home in the city’s South End, according to family members present
For the first time in six decades, the South Coast has passenger rail service to Boston: South Coast Rail
University of Rhode Island, MIT among universities targeted
Rhode Island PBS and The Public’s Radio also offer a scholarship for students in broadcasting, communications, or journalism.