Skip to main content

Update of the Oxford English Dictionary

In the latest update of the Oxford English Dictionary, there are a whole new batch of silly words and definitions including several initialisms — abbreviations consisting of the initial letters of expressions — made popular through their frequent use in text messages, tweets, or emails.
The experts at Oxford Dictionaries Online explain that the initialisms added to the dictionary are "noteworthy" and even happen to be "found outside of electronic contexts" at times, and we believe them. After all, how could these language authorities not add initialisms and words like this to the dictionary without a good reason:
• couch surfing
• ego-surfing
• hentai
• la-la land
• LOL
• meep
• muffin top
• OMG
• party-crashing
• wassup
Our favorite thing in this entire update though? A tweak to the definition of 'heart':
♥ to heart
The new sense added to heart v. in this update may be the first English usage to develop via the medium of T-shirts and bumper-stickers. It originated as a humorous reference to logos featuring a picture of a heart as a symbol for the verb love, like that of the famous ‘I ♥ NY’ tourism campaign. Our earliest quote for this use, from 1984, uses the verb in ‘I heart my dog’s head’, a jokey play on bumper stickers featuring a heart and a picture of the face of a particular breed of dog (expressing a person’s enthusiasm for, say, shih-tzus) which itself became a popular bumper sticker. From these beginnings, heart v. has gone on to live an existence in more traditional genres of literature as a colloquial synonym for ‘to love’.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What is on your Mind?

Well we are almost half way through another quarter at the ICS at AI Jax. How are you feeling about your experience? Are you Learning? Discovering? Exploring? Or are you still in bed..... with the covers over yourhead? If so get up and maek something of yourself. You are in control of your future. You won't beleive what you can do. SO do it.

Trans-Fats

Trans-fat ban could bring unintended consequences New York City has mandated that all of its restaurants will be frying foods only in trans-fat-free oils. The idea seems very enticing since consumption of trans fats, or partially hydrogenated oils has been linked to long-term heart problems. Therefore it seems the logical alternative is to use unsaturated oils. This seems to be true for unheated margarines and salad dressings. However, when the oils are used in frying operations, another picture emerges. It seems these unsaturated oils are prone to random oxidation, producing a plethora of oxidation products. Many of these are reported to be quite toxic. In the book “Symposium on Foods: Lipids and Their Oxidation,” published way back in 1962, there is an entire chapter devoted to the toxicity of heated fats and oils. There are many examples of this toxicity. Here are two: Control rats fed a diet containing 20% corn oil thrived and were normal in very respect. Test rats fed the same die...