Respected UK daily newspaper, The Daily Telegraph, just published the Global Language Monitor Top 10 lists of the most commonly used words, phrases and names in English speaking media internet in the past year. It concludes that ‘drones’ has entered the list of the Top 10 most commonly used words – in fourth place. The full list is here:
The Top Words of 2011
Rank / Word / Comments
- Occupy – ‘Occupy’ has risen to pre-eminence through Occupy Movement, the occupation of Iraq, and the so-called ‘Occupied Territories’.
- Deficit – Growing and possibly intractable problem for the economies of the developed world.
- Fracking – Hydraulic fracturing is a controversial method for extracting fossil fuels from hitherto unreachable deposits.
- Drone – The ever increasing number of remotely piloted aircraft used for reconnaissance and attack purposes.
- Non-veg – A meal served with meat, originally from India, now catching on worldwide.
- Kummerspeck – From the German seeing wider acceptance in the English, excess weight gained from emotional overeating (grief bacon).
- Haboob – A name imported from the Arabic for massive sandstorms in the American Southwest.
- 3Q – Near universal term for ‘thank you’ now earning additional status after being banner from official Chinese dictionaries. Another example of the ever increasing mixing of numbers and letters to form words.
- Trustafarians – Well-to-do youth (trust-funders) living a faux-Bohemian life style, now associated with the London Riots.
- (The Other) 99 – Referring to the majority of those living in Western Democracies who are left out of the dramatic rise in earnings associated with “the Top 1%”.
Source: Daily Telegraph