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        <title><![CDATA[In a shocking twist, dictionaries choose &#x27;pandemic&#x27; as 2020&#x27;s word of the year]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">In a shocking twist, dictionaries choose &#x27;pandemic&#x27; as 2020&#x27;s word of the year</media:title>
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                  <p>How has your 2020 been? There have surely been highs and lows for everyone, but one thing we&apos;ve all shared is the experience of the COVID-19 pandemic. So, now that it&apos;s time for popular dictionaries to choose their annual &quot;word of the year,&quot; Dictionary.com and Merriam-Webster both chose the same one: &quot;Pandemic.&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>Both dictionary websites acknowledge that &quot;pandemic&quot; was certainly the most-searched word of the year on their platforms, especially on Feb. 3 (the day the first COVID-19 patient in the U.S. was released from the hospital) and March 11 (when the World Health Organization officially declared COVID-19 a &quot;pandemic&quot;). But those are mere indications of how the word &quot;pandemic&quot; came to define our lives this year.</p>
                
                          
                   
                
                          
                  <p>&quot;As most of us now know painfully well, a&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em> is defined as &apos;a disease prevalent throughout an entire country, continent, or the whole world.&apos; And yet, the loss of life and livelihood caused by the COVID-19 <em>pandemic</em> defies definition,&quot; <strong>the Dictionary.com post reads</strong>. &quot;With over 60 million confirmed cases, the&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>&#xA0;has claimed over one million lives across the globe and is still rising to new peaks. The&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>&#xA0;has wreaked social and economic disruption on a historic scale and scope, globally impacting every sector of society&#x2014;not to mention its emotional and psychological toll. All other events for most of 2020, from the&#xA0;protests for racial justice&#xA0;to a&#xA0;heated presidential election, were shaped by the&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>. Despite its hardships, the&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>&#xA0;inspired the best of our humanity: resilience and resourcefulness in the face of struggle. <strong>And we thought 2019 was an&#xA0;<em>existential</em> year</strong>...&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p><strong>Merriam-Webster&apos;s post</strong> points out that the pandemic&apos;s ability to affect everyone on Earth is reflected right there in the etymology of the word.</p>
                
                          
                  <p>&quot;The Greek roots of this word tell a clear story:&#xA0;<em>pan</em> means &apos;all&apos; or &apos;every,&apos; and <em>d&#x113;mos</em> means &apos;people&apos;; its literal meaning is &apos;of all the people,&apos;&quot; the post explains. &quot;The related word <em>epidemic</em> comes from roots that mean &apos;on or upon the people.&apos; The two words are used in ways that overlap, but in general usage a&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>&#xA0;is an&#xA0;<em>epidemic</em> that has escalated to affect a large area and population.&quot;</p>
                
                          
                   
                
                          
                  <p>But in addition to the many uses of &quot;pandemic&quot; itself, Dictionary.com points out that the word spawned many new linguistic inventions this year as well. Medical lingo terms like &quot;asymptomatic,&quot; &quot;contact tracing,&quot; and (of course) &quot;quarantine&quot; became commonplace in 2020, while new words and phrases like &quot;anti-masker,&quot; &quot;the Before Times,&quot; and &quot;Zoom fatigue&quot; were also invented to describe the surreal experience of pandemic life.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>&quot;We cannot overstate how rare it is for so many entries, so abruptly, to be added to the dictionary,&quot; Dictionary.com wrote. &quot;The resilience and resourcefulness people confronted the&#xA0;<em>pandemic</em>&#xA0;with also manifested itself in tremendous linguistic creativity. Throughout 2020, our team has been tracking a growing body of so-called&#xA0;<em>coronacoinages</em> that have given expression&#x2014;and have offered some relief from tragedy, some connection in isolation&#x2014;to the lived experience of a surreal year.&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>Here&apos;s hoping the word of 2021 will be slightly more pleasant to experience.</p>
                
                          
                  <p><strong>Related content:</strong></p>
                
                          
                  <ul>
                 	<li><strong>Dictionary.com names &apos;existential&apos; as 2019 word of the year</strong></li>
                 	<li><strong>&#x2018;Misinformation&#x2019; named 2018&apos;s word of the year by Dictionary.com</strong></li>
                 	<li><strong>&#x2018;Complicit&#x2019; named word of the year for 2017 by Dictionary.com</strong></li>
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        <p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>EW</strong> - Author:<strong>Christian Holub</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Christian Holub]]></dc:creator>
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