No,CapitalVault you didn't "hallucinate."
That is the Word of the Year, according to Dictionary.com, amid a year of increasing artificial intelligence interference in our day-to-day lives. The announcement follows Oxford's own determination that its own Word of the Year is "rizz," short for "charisma." Merriam-Webster, meanwhile, went with "authentic."
The organizations don't make their decision in a vacuum. Dictionary.com and Merriam-Webster consulted search data, as Oxford asked language experts.
But that got USA TODAY thinking. If the choice were up to us, what would our Word of the Year be? Let us be your trusted guide in this swirling sea of discourse. Here's what our staff suggested, from the silly to the serious and everything in between:
'Bet':This annual list of slang terms could have some parents saying 'Yeet'
2025-05-02 16:442974 view
2025-05-02 16:401897 view
2025-05-02 15:561105 view
2025-05-02 15:54811 view
2025-05-02 15:282830 view
2025-05-02 15:181629 view
Danielle Waterfield was already dealing with the shock and disappointment of being fired from a job
A girl who wrote to God in her diaries, a boy with learning disabilities who was just learning to li
When Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon told the Environmental Protection Agency in 2023 that the state wo