A Word, Please: Tired of hearing that word? You can find out if itâs always been so popular
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Years back, a reader of this column mentioned that, all of a sudden, she was hearing the word âwhingeâ everywhere. What was up with that, she wanted to know. I had no answer. To my recollection, that was the first time Iâd ever come across the word âwhinge.â
Back then, I didnât know about Ngram Viewer â a Google service you can use to search published writing to learn how popular a word is over time. Ngram Viewer lets you choose from several different databases of published works, some dating back to 1800. Just put in the word and youâll see the percentage of books your word appeared in, plotted over time.
Thatâs how I learned that my reader was right: âwhinge,â which means to complain or whine, was extremely rare in print until about 1980, when it suddenly began skyrocketing, peaking in 2012. So I wondered: Is âwhingeâ replacing âwhineâ? Ngram Viewer lets you plot words in comparison to each other, so I typed in âwhinge, whineâ and saw that my theory was wrong. âWhine,â like âwhinge,â also started getting more popular around 1980, peaking in the 2010s. Yet âwhineâ remains far more common â appearing about 40 times as often as âwhinge.â
This all reminded me of another reader question I couldnât answer many years ago: Is âfraught withâ losing ground to just plain-old âfraughtâ? In my experience, definitely. I never heard âfraughtâ by itself until pretty recently. So I searched them both. It turns out that the standalone âfraughtâ has gotten more popular in my lifetime, but thatâs only because it dipped in popularity in the decades leading up to the 1960s. For a century and a half before then, âfraughtâ without âwithâ was about as popular as it is today.
Sometimes, when I notice a word or phrase or spelling getting more popular, I get annoyed. I canât defend my reaction. Language changes, so I need to accept it. But when Iâve put in the effort to learn, say, how to spell âbandannaâ then notice everyone, including professionals, spelling it âbandana,â I canât help but bristle. I worry that my little nugget of spelling wisdom is being rendered obsolete by the passage of time. In the case of âbandanna,â it is. The single-n spelling overtook the double-n spelling in the early 2010s, and dictionaries allow both spellings, so I donât expect it to recover anytime soon.
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Because I edit a lot of marketing copy, I get a close-up look at annoying word trends like âimmersive.â Apparently, some years back, marketers figured this adjective can make any trip, amusement park or museum exhibit sound more intense. Everything is an âimmersive experienceâ these days. Or is it just me? Nope. âImmersive,â according to Ngram Viewer, was practically nonexistent till around 1990, when it began skyrocketing, with no end in sight, unfortunately.
Sometimes the language trends I notice in my work are not mirrored in the culture at large. For example, lately, I keep seeing âwellbeingâ in place of âwell-being.â Thatâs wrong, according to dictionaries and editing guides, and itâs also fascinating because itâs a window into how hyphenated terms slowly over time become closed terms. âTeen-agerâ and âgood-byeâ are examples. But according to Ngram Viewer, âwellbeingâ isnât any more popular relative to âwell-beingâ than itâs ever been, at least not through 2019, the last year the database includes. Both terms have gotten more popular, presumably because books and articles about health have been on the rise. But âwell-beingâ remains far more common than its closed counterpart.
Ditto that for âstep foot,â as in âI wouldnât step foot in that restaurant,â which I suddenly hear people say all the time instead of âset foot.â They have both gotten more popular in print in recent years, but âset footâ has maintained a strong lead over âstep foot,â Iâm pleased to say.
So if you ever find yourself wondering, âIs everyone using this word nowadays, or is it just me?â you can confirm or debunk your fears with just a few keystrokes.
June Casagrande is the author of âThe Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.â She can be reached at [email protected].
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