At the end of each timeline year, numerous well-known online dictionaries, encyclopedias, and study places pick a Word of the Year. These words or phrases were most frequently voted on, used frequently in the internet, or voted up by their customers throughout the year.
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According to Merriam-Webster, 2024’s Word of the Year is “polarization”. The site defines “polarization” as “division into two sharply distinct opposites, especially, a state in which the opinions, beliefs, or interests of a group or society no longer range along a continuum but become concentrated at opposing extremes” . ,
Really, who could say that America wasn’t more divided than ever in 2024?
Merriam-Webster chooses the expression of the year from a list of words that have been published continuously since 1828. Higher search volume on the textbook’s site “reflected the want of Americans to better understand the complex state of affairs in our nation and around the world,” according to Merriam-Webster throughout the controversial 2024 election time.  ,
This term is frequently used in the internet. Right-leaning Fox News reported that vice presidential candidate JD” Vance’s debate answer on immigration crisis show]ed ] voter polarization in real-time responses”. However, hard-left MSNBC observed,” The 2024 presidential poll has left our nation more divided than actually”. Beyond politics, Forbes used the word to describe the divide in U. S. culture, warning about” the chilling effect]cultural ] polarization has on workplace communication” . ,
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Who among us hasn’t avoided speaking with a colleague or family member to avoid hearing another talk about how prejudiced and cruel we are?
Recommended:  , 5 New Year’s Resolutions for the Mainstream Media: 2025 Edition
Of course, “polarization” wasn’t the only expression with considerable searching figures. Further thoughts with high-volume lookups on the website in 2024 included:
Totality: Sparked by the looming occurrence of a solar eclipse that had quickly move day into night across thirteen U. S. states in April, users looked up” totality”, which is” the phase of an eclipse during which it is complete, the state of complete eclipse”. Really, people had to glance up this one? I tremble for our country.
Ladylike: Fueled by a transgender woman TikToker named Jools Lebron, the phrase’s usage surged in August. With the popular phrase,” You see how I do my beauty for job? Quite sultry, very mindful”, Lebron’s term “very demure, very conscious” became a meme, prompting another TikTockers to start looking it up and using it unnecessarily because all originality is dying on that platform. Unsurprisingly, the “demure” of the 14th century (avoiding attention ) is not the “demure” of 2024 ( fake shyness ). I can’t even with this one.
For this one, Taylor Swift, the so-called singer, and her legion of Swifties are to blame for this. Swift’s song” Fortnight” brought the 700-year-old term back into use in 2024. It means” a period of 14 days, two weeks” or “fourteen nights”. We can only hope that the Taylor Swift trend lasts a fortnight longer.
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Pander: In mid-October, when both sides of the political aisle mockingly used it against the other, searches for this one spiked. The word means” to say, do, or provide what someone wants or demands even though it is not proper, good, or reasonable”. Do you recall hearing Harris use her fake accents to pander to voters of color? Yeah, we ain’t no ways tired of that one, either.
Resonate:  , ChatGPT and the lazy media gave us this high-use gem. The word was frequently used in political news to address issues and issues that piqued voters, and it was partially defined as” to affect or appeal to someone in a personal or emotional way.” Hello, dead word, anyone? Anyone?
Allision:  , Finally, an actually interesting word, it had high lookup numbers after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse in Baltimore in March. News sources began using the term instead of” collision”. An “allision” is when a ship runs into a stationary object, while a collision is contact between two moving objects. Who knew?
Weird: You knew this one would have to be here, didn’t you? Vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz called JD Vance and MAGA “weird people on the other side” in late July. The sycophantic leftist media then picked up the word” of strange or extraordinary character” and used it frequently. It’s weird how we won anyway, huh? Sticks and stones, my friends. Sticks and stones.
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Dictionary .com also chose Jools Lebron’s “demure” as their Word of the Year. Lawd, help us all.
#verydemure #verymindful #demure- original sound- commentson @commentforum @Jools Lebron #demureoriginal #verydemure #verydemure #verymindful #demure
Following a public vote of over 37, 000 users, Oxford University Press announced that the Word of the Year for 2024 was “brain rot” . ,
It’s the” supposed deterioration of a person’s mental or intellectual state”, mainly due to overconsumption of material ( particularly online content ) considered trivial or unchallenging. It can also be used to describe something that causes that deterioration.  ,
In other words, that’s the perfect encapsulation of the year that was 2024.