Merriam-Webster’s top word of 2020 not a shocker: Pandemic — - today

NEW YORK — If you were to choose a word that rose above most in 2020, which word would it be?

Ding, ding, ding: Mer­ri­am-Web­ster on Mon­day announced “pan­dem­ic” as its 2020 word of the year.

“That prob­a­bly isn’t a big shock,” Peter Sokolows­ki, edi­tor at large for Mer­ri­am-Web­ster, told The Asso­ci­at­ed Press.

“Often the big news sto­ry has a tech­ni­cal word that’s asso­ci­at­ed with it and in this case, the word pan­dem­ic is not just tech­ni­cal but has become gen­er­al. It’s prob­a­bly the word by which we’ll refer to this peri­od in the future,” he said.

The word took on urgent speci­fici­ty in March, when the coro­n­avirus cri­sis was des­ig­nat­ed a pan­dem­ic, but it start­ed to trend up on Merriam-Webster.com as ear­ly Jan­u­ary and again in Feb­ru­ary when the first U.S. deaths and out­breaks on cruise ships occurred.

On March 11, when the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion declared the nov­el coro­n­avirus out­break a glob­al pan­dem­ic, lookups on the site for pan­dem­ic spiked huge­ly. Site inter­est for the word has remained sig­nif­i­cant­ly high through the year, Sokolows­ki said.

By huge, Sokolows­ki means search­es for pan­dem­ic on March 11 were 115,806% high­er than lookups expe­ri­enced on the same date last year.

Pan­dem­ic, with roots in Latin and Greek, is a com­bi­na­tion of “pan,” for all, and “demos,” for peo­ple or pop­u­la­tion. The lat­ter is the same root of “democ­ra­cy,” Sokolows­ki not­ed. The word pan­dem­ic dates to the mid-1600s, used broad­ly for “uni­ver­sal” and more specif­i­cal­ly to dis­ease in a med­ical text in the 1660s, he said.

That was after the plagues of the Mid­dle Ages, Sokolows­ki said.

He attrib­ut­es the lookup traf­fic for pan­dem­ic not entire­ly to searchers who didn’t know what it meant but also to those on the hunt for more detail, or for inspi­ra­tion or comfort.

“We see that the word love is looked up around Valentine’s Day and the word cor­nu­copia is looked up at Thanks­giv­ing,” Sokolows­ki said. “We see a word like sur­re­al spik­ing when a moment of nation­al tragedy or shock occurs. It’s the idea of dic­tio­nar­ies being the begin­ning of putting your thoughts in order.”

Mer­ri­am-Web­ster act­ed quick­ly in March to add and update entries on its site for words relat­ed to the pan­dem­ic. While “coro­n­avirus” had been in the dic­tio­nary for decades, “COVID-19” was coined in Feb­ru­ary. Thir­ty-four days lat­er, Mer­ri­am-Web­ster had it up online, along with a cou­ple dozen oth­er entries that were revised to reflect the health emergency.

“That’s the short­est peri­od of time we’ve ever seen a word go from coinage to entry,” Sokolows­ki said. “The word had this urgency.”

Coro­n­avirus was among run­ners up for word of the year as it jumped into the main­stream. Quar­an­tine, asymp­to­matic, mam­ba, krak­en, defund, ante­bel­lum, irre­gard­less, icon, schaden­freude and malarkey were also run­ners up based on lookup spikes around spe­cif­ic events.

Par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est­ing to word nerds like Sokolows­ki, a lex­i­cog­ra­ph­er, is quar­an­tine. With Ital­ian roots, it was used dur­ing the Black Death of the 1300s for the peri­od of time a new ship com­ing into port would have to wait out­side a city to pre­vent dis­ease. The “quar” in quar­an­tine derives from 40, for the 40 days required.

Spikes for mam­ba occurred after the Jan­u­ary death of Kobe Bryant, whose nick­name was the Black Mam­ba. A mass of lookups occurred for krak­en in July after Seattle’s new Nation­al Hock­ey League fran­chise chose the myth­i­cal sea mon­ster as its name, urged along by fans.

Coun­try group Lady Antebellum’s name change to Lady A drove dic­tio­nary inter­est in June, while malarkey got a boost from Pres­i­dent-elect Joe Biden, who’s fond of using the word. Icon was front and cen­ter in head­lines after the deaths of U.S. Rep. John Lewis and U.S. Supreme Court Jus­tice Ruth Bad­er Ginsberg.

The Mer­ri­am-Web­ster site has about 40 mil­lion unique month­ly users and about 100 mil­lion month­ly page views.

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