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New words in the English language
English, the
second most spoken language in the world (Mandarin being the most spoken),
has more words than any other language. But English speakers generally
use only about 1% of the language. About one third of the more than one
million English words are technical terms. Still, every decade new words
are added to the English language. Here are some of them -
1940's
ack-ack, apartheid, atom bomb, baby-sit, barf, bazooka, cheeseburger,
crash-land, flying saucer, gobbledygook
1950's
aerospace, alphanumeric, brainstorming, car wash, cha-cha, digitize, do-it-yourself,
ethnohistory, in-house, meter maid
1960's
area code, ASCII, biohazard, Brownie point, crib death, doofus, disco,
glitch, microwave oven, Op-Ed, sexism
1970's
airhead, bean counter, biofeedback, deadbeat dad, diskette, electronic
mail, junk food, gentrify, surrogate mother
1980's
AIDS, boom box, caller ID, channel surf, cyberpunk, dis, fragile X syndrome,
greenmail, sandwich generation, trophy wife, voice mail, wannabe
1990's
anatomically correct, bad hair day, brux, digerati, granny dumping, medicide,
netnanny, olestra, soccer mom, step aerobics, uptalk, World Wide Web
Did you know?
Before the year 1000, the word "she" did not exist in the
English language. The singular female reference was the word "heo",
which also was the plural of all genders. The word "she"
appeared only in the 12th century, about 400 years after English began
to take form. "She" probably derived from the Old English
feminine "seo", the Viking word for feminine reference. |
Tracking new words
Word Spy 
MacMillan
Merriam-Webster
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