Skip to main content
BBC NEWS / AMERICAS
Graphics VersionBBC Sport Home
News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Health | Science & Environment | Technology | Entertainment | Also in the news | Have Your Say |
11:14 GMT, Wednesday, 10 June 2009 12:14 UK

'Millionth English word' declared

Words in the mental cupboard

Dictionaries

A US web monitoring firm has declared the millionth English word to be Web 2.0, a term for the latest generation of web products and services.

Global Language Monitor (GLM) searches the internet for newly coined terms, and once a word or phrase has been used 25,000 times, it recognises it.

GLM said Web 2.0 beat out the terms Jai ho, N00b and slumdog to take top spot.

However, traditional dictionary makers are casting doubt on the claim and the methods behind it.

GLM, based in Texas, makes its money telling organisations how often they are mentioned in new media, such as the internet, but it can also track new words and expressions.

Once a word has been used 25,000 times on social networking and other sites, GLM declares it be a new word.

The terms Jai ho and slumdog originate from the hit movie Slumdog Millionaire, about India's slum dwellers.

But N00b comes from the gaming community, the company said, explaining that it is used as a disparaging term to describe a neophyte in a particular game.

It is also the "only mainstream English word that contains within itself two numerals", GLM said in a statement posted on its website.

Landmark doubted

However lexicographers doubt GLM's claim, says BBC arts correspondent Lawrence Pollard.

FROM THE TODAY PROGRAMME

More from Today programme

Dictionaries have tighter criteria about what constitutes a new word. For example, it has to be used over a certain period of time.

Lexicographers say the exact size of the English vocabulary is impossible to quantify, but if every technical term or obscure specialist word is accepted then we are already beyond one million, according to our correspondent.

And if the inclusion of specialist slang is restricted, then there are possibly three quarters of a million words in English.

All of which is way beyond the 20-40,000 words a fluent speaker would use, or the few thousand you could get by with in English.

But with 1.5 billion people speaking some version of English, it is small wonder it is the fastest growing language in the world, our correspondent adds.




E-mail this to a friend
Related to this story:
'Oldest English words' identified (26 Feb 09 |  Science & Environment )
Cornish language extinct, says UN (20 Feb 09 |  Cornwall )
The man who reads dictionaries (07 Oct 08 |  Magazine )
Are indigenous languages dead? (06 Jan 06 |  Africa )
Gordon Bennett! Who was he? (03 Jan 07 |  Magazine )
Bones point to origins of speech (25 Jun 04 |  Europe )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
Global Language Monitor
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



SEARCH BBC NEWS: 

News Front Page | Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia | UK | Business | Health | Science & Environment | Technology | Entertainment | Also in the news | Have Your Say |

NewsWatch | Notes | Contact us | About BBC News | Profiles | History

^ Back to top | BBC Sport Home | BBC Homepage | Contact us | Help | ©