By Patrick Wood
You may have noticed social media taking over our lives, but did you know it’s also influencing the language we use and which new words gain popularity?
The Oxford and Collins dictionaries have both recently released their words of the year lists , which include entries such as “Brexit”, “woke”, “sharenting” and “mic drop”.
Crossword creator and wordsmith David Astle said these words — and others that grace the new list — have been fuelled by social media hashtags or driven by popular figures on the internet.
“[Social media] has been a massive dynamo for lexicography, because suddenly so much more snubs and shares and intimations are now in text,” he said.
“Before they used to be down on the corner, in the pub, in the city square.
“Now, because we’re sharing by text and tweets and Instagram, suddenly we have a snail trail of how language is used and how many people are using it.”
Mr Astle doesn’t see any issue with this lexicon leap, and said it wasn’t about dumbing down language but just spreading the word.
“It’s hard for a word to come in without it being picked up by social media,” he said.
“But it doesn’t mean that social media is the judge and jury.
“It’s just the agent, the town crier, and the lexicographer is walking down the street and the more he hears that word, or she hears that word, the more she can consider that as being something to include in the wider glossary.”