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Word Of The Year: Merriam-Webster Dictionary Picks 'Pragmatic'

Word Of The Year

By STEPHANIE REITZ   12/15/11 06:24 AM ET   AP

-- When the time came for Merriam-Webster to pick its top word of 2011, its editors decided they needed to be pragmatic.

So they chose ... pragmatic.

The word, an adjective that means practical and logical, was looked up so often on Merriam-Webster's online dictionary that the publisher says "pragmatic" was the pragmatic choice for its 2011 Word of the Year.

Though it wasn't traced to a specific news event or quote from a famous person, searches for "pragmatic" jumped in the weeks before Congress voted in August to increase the nation's debt ceiling, and again as its supercommittee tried to craft deficit-cutting measures this fall.

"Pragmatic" may have sparked dictionary users' interest both because they'd heard it in conversations, and because it captures the current American mood of encouraging practicality over frivolity, said John Morse, president and publisher of Springfield, Mass.-based Merriam-Webster.

"`Pragmatic' is a word that describes a kind of quality that people value in themselves but also look for in others, and look for in policymakers and the activities of people around them," Morse said.

A new feature on Merriam-Webster's site allows users to tell the dictionary publisher why they sought that specific word, and the feedback from those who looked up "pragmatic" was that they wanted to reaffirm that the connotation was positive.

"People have a general sense of what the word meant and in fact had even been using it, but then they had a moment when they thought to themselves, `Perhaps I ought to look up that word and make sure it means what I think it means,'" Morse said.

Merriam-Webster has been picking its annual top choice since 2003. Previous winners include: austerity (2010), admonish (2009) and bailout (2008).

"Austerity" also made the top 10 list in 2011 along with ambivalence, insidious, didactic, diversity, capitalism, socialism, vitriol and "apres moi le deluge."

That quote, attributed to King Louis XV of France, translates to, "After me, the flood," and was used by columnist David Gergen in a piece about the Congressional supercommittee's failure to reach a deficit-cutting deal.

Merriam-Webster says it's generally used to allude to people who behave as if they don't care about the future, since "the flood" will happen after they're gone.

Morse and Peter Sokolowski, Merriam-Webster's editor at large, said they would not have been surprised if some people had expected "occupy" to be the 2011 Word of the Year because of the interest raised by Occupy Wall Street protests and similar encampments.

Though it was used a lot in conversation, "occupy" did not prompt an unusual number of searches.

"It's like the dog that doesn't bark. `Occupy' or `recession' or `entitlement' are words you see pop up occasionally in the daily log of lookups, but not in the yearly log," Sokolowski said.

"Occupy" still has a chance to grab a spot in the linguistic limelight, though, because it's being considered among the front-runners for the American Dialect Society's 2011 Word of the Year.

That group's annual choice isn't driven by dictionary lookups, but is a word or phrase that members consider widely used, demonstrably new or popular and reflects the year's popular discourse – similar, in a sense, to Time's selection of Person of the Year. The magazine chose "the protester" as its person of the year for 2011.

The American Dialect Society will announce its selection Jan. 6 after a vote at its annual convention in Portland, Ore., and the group's executive secretary, Allan Metcalf, says "occupy" is getting a lot of buzz.

But so is "Tebow time," a concept that alludes to Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow's ability to rally late-game comebacks – and, in a broader sense, applied to any success or comeback at crunch time.

"Maybe `Tebow time' might win the Word of the Year in the crunch, but we have two weeks left to go, so who knows what other words might pop up," said Metcalf, who is also an English professor at MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Ill., and author of "OK: The Improbable Story of America's Greatest Word."

Another outlet, the London-based Oxford English Dictionary, also named its 2011 word choice in November: "squeezed middle," a primarily term credited to British Labour Party leader Ed Miliband to describe the financial pinch felt by the middle class in Great Britain.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DWHarper
09:56 PM on 12/17/2011
There's only one choice for word of the year and it is obviously OCCUPY considering it's importance to America's protest movement along with the Arab world's revolution. What world do the editor's live in?
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Red45
We can turn the tide
04:58 PM on 12/16/2011
Wow. This is what happens when you don't have any good ideas.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madcityy
02:40 PM on 12/16/2011
I DONT LIKE THIS WORD,IT MEANS GIVE IN TO A MORONS POINT OF VIEW ,AS A VALID ONE,,,,
07:25 PM on 12/16/2011
Clearly not your favorite word: "punctuation." And please remove your forehead from the "caps lock" key. Thank you.
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BlueRoseofTexas
There is nothing micro about my bio
03:02 PM on 12/19/2011
I like it in the context of not throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Adhering to principles blindly when it's obvious you will walk away a loser, with nothing to show and perhaps a very harmful outcome is is not helpful. There are ways to get what's most important while perhaps giving on something else without sacrificing your principles. It is this zeal to not give way on anything that has us so polarized and frozen in divisiveness.
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atx888
micro-bio empty bcuz my brain need the space
04:13 AM on 12/16/2011
The folks at Merriam-Webster must be having a monumental brain freeze.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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clintnapril2
A clear conscience is a sign of a fuzzy memory.
03:07 AM on 12/16/2011
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.... The longest word in the English language as far as i have found. LOL
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atx888
micro-bio empty bcuz my brain need the space
04:10 AM on 12/16/2011
The only way of getting the spelling right is via copy and paste.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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clintnapril2
A clear conscience is a sign of a fuzzy memory.
04:27 AM on 12/16/2011
I thought I had it right from memory. I will double check. In case you're wondering... I am that kind of person.
GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
02:11 AM on 12/16/2011
Thank God they didn't pick the word WINNING!
12:43 AM on 12/16/2011
If people have to look up the word "pragmatic", then perhaps the word of the year should be "stupid".
12:23 AM on 12/16/2011
It should have been that annoying cobo of 2 words Maaaaasive Taaaaaxes.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
12:10 AM on 12/16/2011
no no no! word of year is ... COOKIEEEEEEEEEEE!!!! OMNOMNOMNOMNOMNOM!!!!!!
collectsrocks
It's good to be good & nice to be nice
11:08 PM on 12/15/2011
Whew. At least it wasn't the word "epic." I'm so sick of hearing that word overused.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Clare53
02:15 PM on 12/16/2011
Or iconic.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
05:00 PM on 12/16/2011
Or "processeez" which we are sick and tired of hearing in Silicon Valley. So pretentious.
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BlueRoseofTexas
There is nothing micro about my bio
03:03 PM on 12/19/2011
Or "ideation." Makes my skin crawl.
09:29 PM on 12/15/2011
At first I thought it was a dumb selection, but being pragmatic is the only way to go these days. Frivolity is a thing of the past and austerity is staring us in the face.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Clare53
02:16 PM on 12/16/2011
Well said.
09:15 PM on 12/15/2011
I wish they'd stop taking words out of the dictionary.
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BlueRoseofTexas
There is nothing micro about my bio
03:03 PM on 12/19/2011
They did? Which ones?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joe477
There can be only one...
09:11 PM on 12/15/2011
I would have thought "demagogue" since it has been so overused and misused on television this year.
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ivanhoemb
Oderint dum metuant
08:53 PM on 12/15/2011
Well, at least they didn't punt like Time magazine and pick "protester."
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dickn2000b
omnes autem stulti me
08:38 PM on 12/15/2011
Uuuhhh...excuse me, but who really cares which word gets chosen?
GOODDOC1
"civil war" is an oxymoron
02:11 AM on 12/16/2011
You, evidently, because you not only read the article but you commented on it!
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dickn2000b
omnes autem stulti me
02:30 AM on 12/16/2011
You have made a wrong assumption. I did not read the story. I read the first two sentences. The comment was based on my total lack of interest in the story. So you see you have wasted your time by making assumptions about someone you know nothing whatsoever about. How does it feel to be totally irrelevant?