New words – 11 June 2012

bahahaha exclamation used to denote laughing on social networking websites

bahahaha i like the teacher story

[www.facebook.com 25 Jan 2012]

idiocracy noun rule, government or control exercised by foolish people

This is what happens when you move from being a technological leader in the world to becoming an idiocracy. Your infrastructure starts to crumble and you just run behind the problems.

[Natural History (US nature and science magazine) Jan. 2012]

neuromarketing noun the use of equipment that measures brain impulses to assess how people respond to products

Gemma Calvert, a former Oxford University neurologist […] said neuromarketing has ‘completely changed our understanding of the brain’ and is now so advanced that she is ‘able to predict how customers will behave’.

[The Observer (UK broadsheet) 15 Jan 2012]

pink slime noun a beef product made from offcuts of meat which is heated and spun in a centrifuge before being treated with ammonium hydroxide gas to kill any bacteria

A US company that makes a beef product often referred to as ‘pink slime’ is suspending production at three of four plants amid concern about the product.

[www.bbc.co.uk 26 March 2012]

About new words

New words – 4 June 2012

biomimicry noun the imitation of naturally occurring phenomena for use in products, technology, etc.

The innovative glue is just one example of how the burgeoning field of biomimicry is benefitting the health of humans and the planet.

[www.huffingtonpost.com 4 Jan 2012]

Biomimicry explores patterns found in the diversity of nature as the inspiration for technology and inventions that benefit people.

[simplyscience.wordpress.com 3 Jan 2012]

elastic electronics plural noun electronic circuits on a tissue-thin film, which will stick to organic tissue and can bend and stretch with the body

He hopes elastic electronics will open the door to a range of what he calls ‘bio-integrated’ medical devices.

[Natural History (US nature and science magazine) Feb. 2012]

holopresence noun a proposed new technology, used for instance for teleconferencing, that uses very high quality images and sound to give the impression that people are in the same room, or to give the impression that someone is in a different place

And Google’s executive chairman used a keynote speech to argue that technology would enable a fairer world – he said that superfast broadband would enable a new future of ‘holopresence’ where we could visit carnivals and concerts from our own homes.

[www.telegraph.co.uk 1 March 2012]

synthetic biology noun the creation of living forms, for example viruses; an emerging science

The Woodrow Wilson Centre, in Washington, US, warns that there is no way of monitoring labs tinkering with ‘synthetic biology’ to ensure that anything created is safe.

[www.dailymail.co.uk 8 Feb 2012]

About new words

New words – 28 May 2012

babymoon noun a vacation taken by a couple who are expecting their first child

We went to Italy and to Hawaii – we had our honeymoon and our babymoon.

[Heard in conversation (woman in her early thirties) 18 March 2012]

doga noun yoga for dogs

If you love yoga and you love dogs, then you’ll be over the moon about Doga.

[www.huffingtonpost.com 10 Feb 2012]

sonic logo noun a very short piece of music or group of notes that represent a company or product

How do you cull it down so that it reminds you of the long form? That’s really the essence of the sonic logos.

[WWNYC: Soundcheck (music) 3 March 2012]

tricorder noun a handheld device for diagnosing diseases and storing data about them

Made famous by Dr McCoy in the Star Trek series, the handheld tricorder could help detect diseases.

[www.telegraph.co.uk 13 Jan 2012]

Prof Jeremy Nicholson, head of the department of surgery and cancer at Imperial College London, told the BBC there are already medical devices which detect chemical signs of illness to assist diagnosis. However, he warned that bringing this technology together into one tricorder-sized piece of equipment would be a very daunting challenge.

[www.bbc.co.uk 12 Jan 2012]

About new words

New words – 21 May 2012

newsgame noun a political game based on a situation in the news and distributed free online

The idea of developing online interactive apps was also partly inspired by the burgeoning concept of the newsgame […]
[The Observer (UK broadsheet) 2 Oct 2011]

platform game noun a computer game that involves moving a character across suspended platforms

A vertical-jumping platform game, starring a sleepy Raccoon whose forest is being destroyed by robots.
[toucharcade.com 21 Nov 2011]

platformer noun a platform game

Rayman Origins is a gorgeous, delightful and challenging platformer for all ages.
[www.telegraph.co.uk 2 Dec 2011]

Terry Cavanagh’s gravity-bending platformer VVVVVV will be coming to Nintendo’s 3D handheld, thanks to a recent publishing deal with Nicalis.
[www.anandtech.com 6 Oct 2011]

platforming noun the activity of playing platform games

Frequent and forgiving checkpoints make each dastardly platforming challenge a one-time-only affair, but I’m still certain I wound up with a few gray hairs after my harrowing journey through VVVVVV.
[www.anandtech.com 6 Dec 2011]

About new words

New words – 14 May 2012

lights-out machine noun a machine controlled by a computer that does not require a human operator or supervision and can operate throughout the night

John Hill’s 30 employees design and assemble plastic injection molds. That requires direct labor. The company does use lights-out machines to make the parts for those molds.
[WNYC: Marketplace (NPR, financal news) 1 Dec 2011]

lit flick noun informal a film adapted from a novel of some literary merit

Classic lit flick: Stanley Kubrick’s one-time banned A Clockwork Orange starring Malcolm McDowell
[www.metro.co.uk 8 Nov 2011]

negawatt noun a notional unit of power which represents the amount of energy saved through a particular measure

Energy conservation has been dubbed the fifth fuel. Negawatt is environmental scientist Amory Lovin’s term for a unit of energy saved.
[The Observer (UK broadsheet) 6 Nov 2011]

POP noun an acronym that stands for ‘persistent organic pollutant’

In what concentrations those POPs will end up climbing the food chain scientists don’t yet know.
[Natural History (US natural history magazine) Oct. 2011]

About new words

New words – 7 May 2012

mangle noun informal a bangle designed for men

Or you could go chinoiserie with a Thomas Sabo dragon mangle.
[GQ (UK men’s magazine) Nov 2011]

manimoney noun informal alimony paid to a man

In recent years there have been a number of high-profile cases of manimony payments. Last week, Katie Price’s complicated love life was placed, once again, in the spotlight following reports she had been landed with maintenance pay-outs for both her ex-husbands, Peter Andre and Alex Reid.
[www.dailymail.co.uk 25 Nov 2011]

mood tracking noun the practice of tracking the mood of the public using sentiment analysis

Researchers have been exploring this area for some time and applying mood tracking in all sorts of ways.
[WNYC: On the Media (Media news radio program) 11 Nov 2011]

sentiment analysis noun the use of computer algorithms to examine phrasing, grammar, etc., of natural language in large quantities of social media text to detect sentiment and mood and predict public feeling in public health, public policy, socio-economic phenonmena

The CIA didn’t invent the use of sentiment analysis.
[WNYC: On the Media (media news radio program) 11 Nov 2011]

Sentiment analysis reveals how the world is feeling
[WNYC: On the Media (Segment title; media news) 11 Nov 2011]

About new words

New words – 30 April 2012

ghost bike noun a bicycle that has been painted white and left as a memorial at the scene of a cyclist’s death

Commemorating Min Joo Lee, a 24-year-old fashion student killed last month while cycling through King’s Cross, it is one of the latest examples in the fast-growing global phenomenon of ‘ghost bikes’.
[www.guardian.co.uk 10 Nov 2011]

There is a ghost bike memorial at a junction close to where I live and which I pass most days on my bike. If alongside being a memorial the ghost bike also marks a place for cyclists to take extra care, I am not convinced that it works.
[www.guardian.co.uk 21 Nov 2011]

global weirding noun informal extreme and unpredictable weather phenomena, giving credence to the theory of global warming

NASA reports a new twist in global weirding – massively increased rainfall over land this year has resulted in an unexpected (and unprecedented) temporary result […]
[https://plus.google.com 3 Oct 2011]

man camp noun a temporary housing development for men working in the oil extraction industry and related businesses

In recent weeks, Williams County, […] and Mountrail County, […], imposed moratoriums on man camp development.
[New York Times (US broadsheet) 26 Nov 2011]

About new words

New words – 23 April 2012

diamond fibre noun cashmere

The traditional sobriquet for their coat, by the way, is ‘fibre of the gods’ which makes cashmere’s ‘diamond fibre’ sound almost prosaic.
[The Observer (UK broadsheet) 6 Nov 2011]

geo-fence noun the limits of an area around a GPS-enabled device that the user sets for a particular purpose, for example to trigger an errand reminder from a smartphone when leaving home

The shoe works by allowing caregivers or family members to set a perimeter, called a geo-fence, that allows wearers to move freely around a specific area. When they stray […] a message pops up on a computer or phone to alert caregivers.
[AARP Bulletin (US over-50s newspaper) Dec. 2011]

It’s now set up a geo-fence around work […] and when I leave Apple it’ll put up an alert reminding me to call my wife.
[www.apple.com 4 Oct 2011]

K leather noun leather made from kangaroos

Elite athletes had been passionate about the lightweight, buttery fit and the bounce of what sports brands call K leather.
[The Observer (UK broadsheet) 9 Oct 2011]

About new words

New words – 16 April 2012

the new normal noun a situation that had been considered unusual but now seems to be the way things are

Financial crisis has world teetering on the brink – welcome to the new normal
[www.guardian.co.uk 4 Oct 2011]

twisticuffs plural noun humorous an argument conducted on Twitter

No FBUI – Facebooking under the influence; Avoid ‘Twisticuffs’ (online arguments); Be clever on social media vs. being controversial.
[http://law2sm.com 14 Nov 2011]

zombie account noun a savings account that pays negligible interest

Some 20 percent of savings accounts on the market are ‘zombie accounts’ which pay pitiful interests rates of less than 0.1 percent, according to Jane Platt, chief executive of National Savings & Insurance.
[www.citywire.co.uk 24 Nov 2011]

zombie debtor noun a person with a debt that they do not have a hope of paying off because the interest on it is so high

Rise of the zombie debtor as 3.5m consider turning to payday loans
[www.which.co.uk 7 Dec 2011]

About new words

New words – 9 April 2012

automagically adverb independently, without effort and as if by magic

[He explained] how to automagically solve the problem of having millions of rows of data, and not knowing how to find the 15 valuable rows […]
[http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/14 Mar 2012]

global weirding noun informal extreme and unpredictable weather phenomena, giving credence to the theory of global warming

NASA reports a new twist in global weirding – massively increased rainfall over land this year has resulted in an unexpected (and unprecedented) temporary result […]
[https://plus.google.com 3 Oct 2011]

JAAC abbreviation slang an acronym that stands for ‘just another Android cellphone’

At first glance, the Rhyme looks like JAAC (just another Android cellphone).
[New York Times (US broadsheet) 29 Dec 2011]

job flipping noun the changing of careers during a lifetime

Now that the retirement age is set to rise even higher […] the trend for ‘job flipping’ is set to become the norm.
[Marie Claire (UK fashion magazine) Nov. 2011]

About new words