November 13, 2007
Locavore
From the Oxford University Press USA blog:
It’s that time of the year again. It is finally starting to get cold (if you are worried about the global warming maybe you should become carbon-neutral) and the New Oxford American Dictionary is preparing for the holidays by making its biggest announcement of the year. The 2007 Word of the Year is (drum-roll please) locavore.
"Locavore" was coined two years ago by a group of four women in San Francisco who proposed that local residents should try to eat only food grown or produced within a 100-mile radius. Other regional movements have emerged since then, though some groups refer to themselves as “localvores” rather than “locavores.” However it’s spelled, it’s a word to watch.
Runners-up for the 2007 Word of the Year include:
aging in place: the process of growing older while living in one’s own residence, instead of having to move to a new home or community
bacn: email notifications, such as news alerts and social networking updates, that are considered more desirable than unwanted “spam” (coined at PodCamp Pittsburgh in Aug. 2007 and popularized in the blogging community)
cloudware: online applications, such as webmail, powered by massive data storage facilities, also called “cloud servers”
More here.
Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 04:46 AM | Permalink






















Comments
Hmm, I hadn't heard of any of those words.
I guess I'm too much a localinguist.
*sss-boom!*
Posted by: beajerry | Nov 13, 2007 9:12:02 AM
I didn't do much better than beajerry...but in my linguistic location I hear "cougar" and "tase" (not in the same sentence...fortunately) fairly often. Maybe I should move to somewhere more pastoral. Where the people complain about "colony collapse disorder".
Posted by: Pete Chapman | Nov 13, 2007 9:45:43 AM
Wait a minute...if you're a locavore are you "eating la vita loca"?
I apologize. Not to Ricky Martin but to anyone else that speaks Spanish.
Posted by: Pete Chapman | Nov 13, 2007 9:56:43 AM
Post a comment