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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: webisode, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. OUP USA 2010 Word of the Year: Refudiate

Editor’s note: I love being right. I really, really love it. In July, I guessed that “refudiate” would be named Word of the Year, and TA-DAH! I was right. What Paul the Octopus was to the FIFA World Cup, I am to WOTY (may he rest in peace). But that’s enough about me because what’s really important is that…

Refudiate


has been named the New Oxford American Dictionary’s 2010 Word of the Year!

refudiate verb used loosely to mean “reject”: she called on them to refudiate the proposal to build a mosque.
[origin — blend of refute and repudiate]

Now, does that mean that “refudiate” has been added to the New Oxford American Dictionary? No it does not. Currently, there are no definite plans to include “refudiate” in the NOAD, the OED, or any of our other dictionaries. If you are interested in the most recent additions to the NOAD, you can read about them here. We have many dictionary programs, and each team of lexicographers carefully tracks the evolution of the English language. If a word becomes common enough (as did last year’s WOTY, unfriend), they will consider adding it to one (or several) of the dictionaries we publish. As for “refudiate,” well, I’m not yet sure that it will be includiated.

Refudiate: A Historical Perspective

An unquestionable buzzword in 2010, the word refudiate instantly evokes the name of Sarah Palin, who tweeted her way into a flurry of media activity when she used the word in certain statements posted on Twitter. Critics pounced on Palin, lampooning what they saw as nonsensical vocabulary and speculating on whether she meant “refute” or “repudiate.”

From a strictly lexical interpretation of the different contexts in which Palin has used “refudiate,” we have concluded that neither “refute” nor “repudiate” seems consistently precise, and that “refudiate” more or less stands on its own, suggesting a general sense of “reject.”

Although Palin is likely to be forever branded with the coinage of “refudiate,” she is by no means the first person to speak or write it—just as Warren G. Harding was not the first to use the word normalcy when he ran his 1920 presidential campaign under the slogan “A return to normalcy.” But Harding was a political celebrity, as Palin is now, and his critics spared no ridicule for his supposedly ignorant mangling of the correct word “normality.”

The Short List

In alphabetical order, here are our top ten finalists for the 2010 Word of the Year selection:

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2. Webisodes!

I first heard the term “webisode” on a warm July evening last summer, chatting with the two producers who have optioned my books. In case you’re not familiar with webisodes, Wikipedia offers this definition:

An episode of a television show that airs initially as an Internet download or stream as opposed to first airing on broadcast or cable television. The word itself is a portmanteau formed by the words 'web' and 'episode'.

Once I was up-to-speed, the three of us kicked around ways to adapt How to Hook a Hottie in webisode form...an idea which we did indeed run with, and I hope to have more to report on in the future.

And just like the newly pregnant woman who suddenly sees babies all around, I now see webisodes everywhere. Here are some of my favorites:

We Need Girlfriends is not only ground-breaking as one of the first webisodes, but features completely original storyline and characters.

The thirteen Lost “Missing Pieces” are great brain teasers to help fans get deeper in the plot.

And the brand new The Office: The Outburst webisodes are offering up a side story that’s keeping me coming back.

And although the following is not technically a webisode--more of a commercial--it stands out as one of the most amusing I’ve seen in a long time, so check out Beware of the Doghouse.

And let us know if you like them, or maybe some favorites of yours?

Tina

Tina Ferraro
The ABC’s of Kissing Boys (out in 35 days!)
How to Hook a Hottie
Top Ten Uses for an Unworn Prom Dress
www.tinaferraro.com

4 Comments on Webisodes!, last added: 12/11/2008
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