AOC Holds Up a Jar of Georgia 'Drinking Water' Polluted by a Nearby...
Foolhardy Flashback: Stephen Colbert’s Late-Night Exit Is Here, Check Out His 2020 TDS...
Dem Insists Trump Didn’t Win Those Swing States, Blames Elon Musk and Malware
DNC Autopsy Goes Wrong: Democrat Moskowitz Says the Party Is a Botched Corpse
Third Chief of Staff Out: Fetterman’s Shift to Sanity Triggers DC Staff Revolt
Bruce Springsteen Says Stephen Colbert Lost His Show Because the President Can’t Take...
Jimmy Kimmel Urges Viewers Never to Turn On CBS Ever Again (After Colbert...
Gen Z vs. Gen X War Over Lunches Continues: PB&J Is 'What They...
'Because You Never Know When the Last One Is': Kyle Busch Passes Away...
Mastermind Behind $250 Million Feeding Our Future Scam Sentenced; Rep. Ilhan Omar Speechle...
Maine Senate Dem Candidate Graham Platner: Time Magazine's Latest Nazi-Chic Cover Boy
Hostin, We Have a Problem: Sunny Lies on The View, Claims BLM Riots...
Let Us All Join Brian Stelter In Mourning Over One Less Hour of...
Minnesota Fraud Defendant 'On the Run' After Jumping From Fourth Story Balcony to...
Majority Leader John Thune Announces Senate Will Go Home Until June

Dictionary.com would have preferred 'unicorns' to have been word of the year, picks 'xenophobia' instead

Less than a month after Oxford Dictionaries named “post-truth” its word of the year for 2016, Dictionary.com has announced its word of the year: xenophobia, a “fear or hatred of foreigners, people from different cultures, or strangers.”

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/KristenSteinART/status/803225130163965952

Not surprising is the fact that, yes, Donald Trump had a lot to do with the decision. However, the big spike in online searches for the definition of xenophobia first came in June, on the day British citizens voted to exit the European Union.

That vote sent plenty of Brexit voters scurrying to the dictionary to find out just what they were being accused of. Forget whatever reasons they thought they had for voting to leave the European Union; in reality, it was xenophobia that influenced their vote.

Similarly, searches for xenophobia spiked in the United States in the summer after President Obama publicly expressed concern that Donald Trump’s rhetoric didn’t represent populism, but rather “nativism or xenophobia.” (Hillary Clinton wouldn’t drop the word “deplorables” for another three months or so.)

Advertisement

What else was behind Dictionary.com’s decision? The Hollywood Reporter talked to lexicographer Jane Solomon.

The Brexit vote, police violence against people of color, Syria’s refugee crisis, transsexual rights and the U.S. presidential race were among prominent developments that drove debate — and spikes in lookups of the word, said Jane Solomon, one of the dictionary site’s lexicographers.

Speaking of President Obama, Solomon told the Hollywood Reporter that she would have preferred a word like “unicorns” to have won the honor.

In another reality where President Obama is preparing to begin his third term, “unicorns” is likely word of the year every year.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement