From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The American Dialect Society, founded in 1889,
is a learned
society "dedicated to the study of the English
language in North America, and of other languages, or dialects of other languages,
influencing it or influenced by it."[1]
The Society publishes the academic journal, American
Speech. Since its foundation, dialectologists in
English-speaking North America have affiliated themselves with the
American Dialect Society, an association which in its first
constitution defined its objective as "the investigation of the
spoken English of the United States and Canada" (Constitution,
1890). Over the years its objective remained essentially the same,
only expanded to encompass "the English language in North America,
together with other languages or dialects of other languages
influencing it or influenced by it" (Fundamentals, 1991).[2]
The organization was founded as part of a near century-long
effort to create the Dictionary of
American Regional English.[1]
In 1889, when Joseph Wright began editing the English Dialect
Dictionary, a group of American philologists founded the
American Dialect Society with the ultimate purpose of producing a
similar work for the United States. Members of the Society began to
collect material, much of which was published in the Society's
journal Dialect Notes, but little was done toward
compiling a dictionary recording nationwide usage until Frederic G.
Cassidy was appointed Chief Editor in 1963.[3] The
first volume of the Dictionary of American Regional
English, covering the letters A-C, was published in 1985.[1]
The other major project of the Society is the Linguistic Atlas of
the United States and Canada.[2]
The Society has never had more than a few hundred active
members. With so few scholars advancing the enterprise, the
developments in the field came slowly.[2]
Members of the organization include "linguists, lexicographers,
etymologists, grammarians, historians, researchers, writers,
authors, editors, professors, university students, and independent
scholars."[4]
Its activities include a mailing list,[5] which
deals chiefly with American English but also carries some
discussion of other issues of linguistic interest.[6]
Word of the
Year
Since 1991, the American Dialect Society has designated one or
more words or terms to be the word of the year. The New York
Times credits the American Dialect Society with starting
the phenomenon.[7]
2007 was the 18th time ADS members have voted to choose
it, though the society says its vote is for fun only and that they
do not act in any official capacity of introducing words into the
English language.
In addition, the ADS has chosen its "Word of the 1990s" (web), "Word
of the 20th Century" (jazz), and "Word of the Past
Millennium" (she). The
society also selects words in other categories that vary from year
to year, such as most original, most unnecessary, most outrageous
and most likely to succeed (see word of the year).
A number of words chosen by the ADS are also on the list of Merriam-Webster's Words of the
Year, as well as on the Global Language Monitor's Word of the Year lists. Both
Merriam-Webster's and the Global Language Monitor's well-publicized
lists are announced more than month before the ADS voting. [8], [9]
The ADS choices of word of the year are the following:
References
- ^ a
b
c
Flexner, Stuart B. "ONE LANGUAGE, HIGHLY
DIVISIBLE"", The New York Times, December
15, 1985. Accessed February 19, 2008. "THE DARE project began in
1889, when a group of American philologists founded the American
Dialect Society to sponsor and gather material for an American
dialect dictionary."
- ^ a
b
c
Sylvain Auroux, History of the Language
Sciences, Page 2366, Walter de Gruyter, 2006, ISBN
3110167360
- ^
Hall, Joan Houston. "The Dictionary of American Regional English."
Language in the USA: Perspectives for the 21st Century.
Eds. Edward Finegan, John Rickford. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2004. p. 94–95.
- ^ a
b
“Subprime” voted 2007 word of
the year, American Dialect Society, January 4, 2008. Accessed
February 19, 2008.
- ^
description of the ADS-L
mailing list
- ^
E.g., this letter from 2003, in
which a longtime member assures another that discussion of Canadian
English is welcome despite the organization's name and official
self-description: "But as others have pointed out, we're the
American [Dialect Society] not the [American Dialect] Society. So
in principle even non-NAFTA dialects are fair game as well."
- ^ a
b
Newman, Andrew Adam. "How Dictionaries Define
Publicity: the Word of the Year", The New York
Times, December 10, 2007. Accessed February 19, 2008. "The
word-of-the-year ritual probably started with the American Dialect
Society, a scholarly association whose Web site lists yearly picks
as far back as 1990. This year the society will vote in January;
its 2006 selection was “plutoed,” which means “to demote or devalue
someone or something, as happened to the former planet
Pluto.”"
- ^
[[1]]. Twitter
declared top word of 2009
- ^
[[2]]
- ^
Ritter, Jim. "1995's Word Of the Year:
Either `Web' - Or `Newt'", Chicago Sun-Times, December 31,
1995. Accessed February 21, 2008. " The American Dialect Society
selected the 1995 word or phrase of the year Friday night, and it
was a tie between Worldwide Web and a bunch of words referring to
House Speaker Newt Gingrich - Newt Age, Newt Dealer, Newt World
Order, Newtopia, Newtron bomb, Newtspeak, Newtworking, femiNewtie
and King Newt."
- ^
1995 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 1996. Accessed February 21,
2008.
- ^
via Associated press. "LINGUISTS PICK `SOCCER MOM'
AS 1996'S WORD", The Philadelphia
Inquirer, January 5, 1997. Accessed February 21, 2008.
"Soccer mom was voted Word of the Year for 1996 by the American
Dialect Society."
- ^
1996 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 1997. Accessed February 21,
2008.
- ^
Smith, Sheron. "WORD! `MILLENNIUM BUG' IS
PICKED AS TOP PHRASE OF 1997", The Macon Telegraph, January 10, 1998.
Accessed February 21, 2008. "The word of the year for 1997 is ...
``Millennium bug. That's right. The word, actually a phrase,
describing the feared inability of computers to properly recognize
the year 2000, came out on top Friday in the eighth annual ``Word
of the Year balloting in New York City."
- ^
1997 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 1998. Accessed February 21,
2008.
- ^
Gallentine, Shana. "1998: Our society defined in
just a few short words", The Red and Black, January 21,
1999. Accessed February 21, 2008. "The two, along with linguists
from all over the country, voted for the word of the year at the
American Dialect Society's annual meeting in Los Angeles last week.
And what word did the society pick? 'E,' Burkette said.
'Electronic, as in e-mail, e-text, e-commerce. It actually won in a
couple of categories, including most useful and most likely to be
used later.'"
- ^
1998 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 1999. Accessed February 21,
2008.
- ^
Freeman, Jan. "STEAL THIS COINAGE",
The Boston
Globe, June 18, 2000. Accessed February 21, 2008. "The
American Dialect Society named Y2K its word of the year for 1999,
dot-com most likely to succeed, and cybersquat most original, while
web, as in World Wide, was the word of the decade."
- ^
"1999 Words of the Year, Word
of the 1990s, Word of the 20th Century, Word of the
Millennium", American Dialect Society, January 13, 2000.
Accessed February 21, 2008.
- ^
Kershner, Vlae. "Help us choose the 'Word of
the Year' ", San Francisco Chronicle,
December 11, 2002. Accessed February 19, 2008. "In 2000, the word
of the year (as chosen by the American Dialect Society) was "chad,"
a reminder of that year's bizarre presidential election."
- ^
2000 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 2001. Accessed February 19,
2008.
- ^
Scott, Janny. "A NATION CHALLENGED:
LANGUAGE; Words of 9/11 Go From Coffee Shops To the
Dictionaries", The New York Times, February
24, 2002. Accessed February 19, 2008. "When the American Dialect
Society, a group of scholars who study American English, recently
held its annual voting on the top new, or newly reconditioned,
words of the previous year, 9/11 was voted the expression most
likely to last."
- ^
2001 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 2002. Accessed February 19,
2008.
- ^
"'W.M.D.' voted word of
year", USA
Today, January 6, 2003. Accessed February 19, 2008. "A
long-winded phrase whose meaning reflects a nation's worry about
war with Iraq has been voted 2002's word of the year. The American
Dialect Society selected "weapons of mass destruction" as its
annual choice at a meeting in Atlanta."
- ^
2002 Words of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 13, 2003. Accessed February 19,
2008.
- ^
Newman, Andrew Adam. "In Time of Studied
Ambiguity, a Label for the Manly Man", The New York
Times, October 10, 2005. Accessed February 19, 2008. "The
word of the year for 2003 for both the American Dialect Society and
Merriam-Webster: metrosexual."
- ^
2003 Words of the Year,
American dialect Society, January 13, 2004. Accessed February 19,
2008.
- ^
via Associated
Press. "Linguists' phrase of the
year: "Red state, blue state, purple state"", The Seattle
Times, January 10, 2005. Accessed February 19, 2008. "A
panel of linguists has deemed "red state, blue state, purple state"
the phrase that most colored the nation's lexicon in 2004.
Attendees at the annual convention of the Linguistic Society of
America on Friday chose the word or phrase that dominated national
discourse over the course of the last year."
- ^
2004 Word of the Year,
American Dialect Society, January 7, 2005. Accessed February 19,
2008.
- ^
Nash, Margo. "Jersey Footlights",
The
New York Times, April 9, 2006. Accessed February 19, 2008.
"(And he's not bad at launching unusual words like
truthiness. In an interview last year, Mr. Colbert said,
Truthiness is sort of what you want to be true, as opposed to
what the facts support. Earlier this year, the American
Dialect Society cited Mr. Colbert for popularizing truthiness, the
society's 2005 word of the year)."
- ^
Truthiness Voted 2005 Word of
the Year, American Dialect Society, January 6, 2006. Accessed
February 8, 2008.
- ^
“Plutoed” Voted 2006 Word of
the Year, American Dialect Society, January 5, 2007. Accessed
February 19, 2008.
- ^
Mullen, Jim. "LOL - Subprime is delighted
to be word of the year", Chicago Sun-Times, January 23,
2008. Accessed February 19, 2008.
- ^ Barrett, Grant. [3], American Dialect Society, January 8,
2009. Accessed January 9, 2010.
External
links