What’s your all-time favourite supercar? Cheers for the follow!
#Automotive #Supercars #FerrariEnzo #Petrolhead #CarPhotography #BritishEnglish #Introduction"
Hype for the Future 94B: Syllables Required to Pronounce Letters in the English Language
Disclaimer While the American English pronunciation of the letter Z is “zee” and the Commonwealth pronunciation is “zed,” either name can be pronounced in the same number of syllables. Therefore, the syllable counts should remain consistent across distinct varieties of the global language. Introduction While many letters can be pronounced in one or a few syllables, words containing such letters could also be pronounced in fewer syllables than the letters themselves in select […]Today someone called a layer of snow "shallow."
I don't think I've ever heard that used to describe snow. It feels wrong; even though (in the US at least) we say "deep" snow all the time. Shallow is for water, or people. Not for snow. Snow can be light or thin, but not shallow.
Do other people use this phrase? I know English is weird, but it startled me that I'd never noticed this quirk before.
#englishusage #copyediting #askmastodon #englishishard #americanenglish #BritishEnglish #irishenglish
English words of the year 2025
Welcome to the fifth consecutive words-of-the-year post — my way of saying goodbye to the previous year here on the blog.
Before we take a look at the words chosen by the leading lexicographers from the English-speaking world, can you think of any words that had a special significance for you in 2025, either English or from other languages? I’d love to hear about them, so please do post a comment below the post!
It’s only fair to share mine: mayhap. It was on New Year’s Eve that I finished reading Anne Brontë’s fabulous 1848 novel “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall”, which I thoroughly enjoyed. And among all sorts of dated words I encountered there, mayhap has stuck with me as one I’d love to see used again.
Mayhap simply means ‘perhaps’, ‘maybe’. It was formed by combining the modal verb may and the lovely archaic noun hap — ‘chance’, ‘fortune’.
Now, from my retro perspective on to the more forward-looking dictionaries of contemporary English!
Collins | VIBE CODING
Starting with the Collins Dictionary, their Word of the Year 2025 was vibe coding, defined as follows: “the use of artificial intelligence prompted by natural language to assist with the writing of computer code.” The publisher credited Andrej Karpathy, the founding engineer at OpenAI, for popularising the term, using it to describe “how AI enables creative output while he could forget that the code even exists.”
If you don’t care much for AI and the related terminology, you might like some of their shortlisted words more:
Dictionary.com | 67
You’ve probably expected this one, as six-seven was one of biggest and most absurd global social phenomena of 2025. Defined by Dictionary.com as ultimately undefinable, meaningless, and nonsensical, “67” is interpreted as typical brainrot (which, incidentally, was one of Dictionary.com’s shortlisted WOTY 2024).
Among the shortlisted words are aura farming, broligarchy, and clanker, that we’ve already seen; and here are the other ones — not all of which are actual words, mind you:
Merriam-Webster | SLOP
Editors of the Merriam-Webster Dictionary chose slop as the Word of the Year 2025. While the word isn’t new (it’s a synonym for rubbish, among other things), the particular use that drew their attention happens to be connected with AI, namely: “digital content of low quality that is produced usually in quantity by means of artificial intelligence.” I loved this part of the explanation: “Like slime, sludge, and muck, slop has the wet sound of something you don’t want to touch. Slop oozes into everything. The original sense of the word, in the 1700s, was ‘soft mud.’ In the 1800s it came to mean ‘food waste‘ (as in ‘pig slop’), and then more generally, ‘rubbish’ or ‘a product of little or no value.’”
And here are the shortlisted words; you’ll be able to recognise social and political events lurking behind them:
Oxford English Dictionary | RAGE BAIT
Chosen by 30.000 voters, the OED Word of the Year 2025 is rage bait, defined as “online content deliberately designed to elicit anger or outrage by being frustrating, provocative, or offensive, typically posted in order to increase traffic to or engagement with a particular web page or social media account.”
The other two shortlisted words, shared by some of the other publishers, were aura farming and biohacking.
To read my previous WOTY posts or to get more detailed information on the WOTY 2025 chosen by the publishers listed above, click on the links in the Additional Resources section below.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
English words of the year 2021
English years of the year 2022
English words of the year 2023
English words of the year 2024
The Collins Word of the Year 2025
Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year 2025
Merriam-Webster 2025 Word of the Year
NOTES
I’m a freelance language tutor (English, Latin, Classical Greek), researcher, and a literary scholar currently based in Belgrade, Serbia.
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#AmericanEnglish #BritishEnglish #Collins #dictionaries #English #EnglishLanguage #EnglishVocabulary #learningEnglish #MerriamWebster #OxfordEnglishDictionary #words #WOTY
When your British TV interviewee says, "I'm a kid from a council estate" but the transcription AI you're using is USA-coded, things can get apocalyptic pretty fucking quickly.
#AI #Artificialintelligence #BritishEnglish #AmericanEnglish #journalism #journalists #interview #thatescalatedquickly
🎯 Want to sound wise in English?
Use this proverb: Money can’t buy happiness 💸😊- не в деньгах счастье, счастье за деньги не купишь.
Perfect for life lessons and everyday wisdom!
💬 Comment your favorite proverb!
📲 Save this for your vocab boost!
#englishproverbs #moneycantbuyhappiness #learnenglish #advancedenglish #englishteacher #englishforrussians #britishenglish #americanenglish #vocabularyboost #IELTS #CEFR #EnglishTips #EnglishLearning #АнглийскийЯзык #ПреподавательАнглийского
Want to sound romantic and fluent in English?
Use this idiom: head over heels 💘 - влюбиться по уши, сходить с ума от любви, потерять голову.
Perfect for IELTS and real-life love stories!
💬 Comment your favorite idiom!
📲 Save this for your vocab boost!
#englishidioms #learnenglish #headoverheels #ieltsvocabulary #advancedenglish #englishteacher #americanenglish #britishenglish #englishwithgiorgio #passivevocabulary #vocabularyboost #romanticenglish #datingidioms
At my work's annual meeting, we did an exercise of telling a colleague a difficult phrase in your native language.
I chose bɔ́'əl ó wóː'ə, which they couldn't understand and didn't believe was English.
To many southern Brits, it is of course "bottle of water"!
#BritishEnglish #Pronunciation #EnglishPronunciation #GlottalStop