The baby named Hashtag buzzed about on the Internet in November may or may not have been a hoax. But the American Dialect Society has given the Twitter-inspired term a boost by christening âhashtagâ the word of the year.
The decision came at the society's annual meeting in Boston over the weekend, where more than 250 linguists, lexicographers, grammarians, historians and other word maniacs weighed the relative merits of terms like âfiscal cliff,â âGangnam style,â and âmarriage equality.â
There were votes in 10 categories, including Most Unnecessary (âlegitimate rapeâ), Most Euphemistic (âself-deportationâ) and Most Creative (âmansplaining,â meaning a man's condescending explanation to a female audience). â Binders (full of women)â was named top election-related word. âYOLO,â an acronym meaning âyou only live once,â was named Least Likely to Succeed. (It also finished strong in a recent contest nominating terms that should be purged from the language.) âSandyâ was voted name of the year.
In the main category âhashtagâ emerged as something of a dark-horse winner, edging out âfiscal cliffâ and âmarriage equalityâ (which took Most Likely to Succeed honors), despite not being on the official list of nominees, as Ben Zimmer, the chairman of the society's new words committee, noted in a rundown of the action. âThis was the year when the hashtag became a ubiquitous phenomenon in online talk,â Mr. Zimmer said in a statement.
But in language, as in the stock market, past performance is no guarantee of future results. In recent years, the society has given top honors to âoccupy,â âapp,â âtweetâ and âbailout,â all of which seem to have some staying power. But in 1990, the first year of the contest, the prize went to the now-obscure âbushlipsâ (insincere political rhetoric), which beat out seeming no-brainers like âpeace dividend,â âpolitical correctnessâ and âbungee jumping.â