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CAPE FEAR MEMORIAL BRIDGE CLOSURE: UPDATES, RESOURCES, AND CONTEXT

Occupy? Humble Brag? What's Your 'Word Of The Year?'

"Humble brag" is linguist Ben Zimmer's personal favorite for 2011 Â word of the year.
Twitter.com/Humblebrag
"Humble brag" is linguist Ben Zimmer's personal favorite for 2011 Â word of the year.

Merriam-Webster may think that "pragmatic" was 2011's word of the year, as we reported Thursday, but there's certainly lots of room to debate that choice.

And the American Dialect Society has put out its annual call for help in deciding what word it should bestow with the honor.

Last year, the society decided "app" was 2010's top word.

Today on Morning Edition, Boston Globe language columnist Ben Zimmer — who chairs the society's new words committee — told host Renee Montagne that the early favorite is probably "occupy."

It is "an old word that has been invested with new meanings" thanks to the Occupy Wall Street movement and all the other occupy protests it has sparked, Zimmer said. "It has become a call to action itself," he added.

But, of course, there are many other possibilities: "Arab Spring," "bunga bunga" and "tiger blood" come to mind.

Zimmer has a personal favorite: "humble brag." It describes the fake humility of some celebrities when they Tweet or talk about how hard their lives can be.

As The Wall Street Journal's Heard & Scene blog explained back in April, "Harris Wittels, a standup comedian and a writer on the NBC series Parks and Recreation, created a Twitter feed called Humblebrag, which compiles examples of the offense."

An example, from MTV "teen mom" Tyler Baltierra this week:

"Still so akward when ppl keep their speed same with mine on the freeway just to beap n wave lol #justwave&smile #awkward ;)

Have "word of the year" suggestions? The Dialect Society has an e-mail address to send them to: woty@americandialect.org.

And feel free to discuss in our comments thread.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.