Ambient Masthead tags

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Agree or Disagree: Selfie is the Word of the Year

Ashton Kutcher poses in the audience during the 2010 People's Choice Awards

Meryl Streep takes a photo of herself and Hillary Clinton after Clinton hosted a dinner for the Kennedy Center honorees in Washington

Tom Hanks takes a selfie with fellow actor Steve Martin at the 2013 Governors Awards
Images courtesy of www.edition.cnn.com

Source: www.edition.cnn.com

The most esteemed guardian of the English language has bestowed a prestigious honor upon debatably the most embarrassing phenomenon of the digital age: the selfie.

So, grab a smartphone, put on your best duck face and celebrate.Oxford Dictionaries' word for the year for 2013 is "selfie."

And when you share that filtered photo on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, you'll join not just Anthony Weiner and Geraldo, but millions of others around the world perpetuating a tradition started over a decade ago, Oxford says.

The word "selfie" first popped up in an Australian chat room on September 13, 2002, to describe an undignified scene, the dictionaries' publishers believe.

This was the post: "Um, drunk at a mates 21st, I tripped ofer and landed lip first (with front teeth coming a very close second) on a set of steps. I had a hole about 1cm long right through my bottom lip. And sorry about the focus, it was a selfie."

Yes, the first-ever known mention of the word "selfie" stemmed from an inebriated mouth with teeth protruding through its bottom lip.

Given those circumstances, Oxford may not much care how you spell it.

You could go with "ie" or "y," as in "selfy."

Oxford says that doesn't change the official definition:

"A photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically one taken with a smartphone or webcam and uploaded to a social media website."

Complete unknown

For years after its birth, "selfie" crept through the web largely unnoticed.

But in 2012, the word of the year began its ascent to digital fame, Oxford says.

Suddenly, everybody around the world was using the word, as they self-snapped away.

By August this year, Oxford proclaimed it a real English-language word and gave it a place in the dictionary -- but that was merely a stepping stone to lingual infamy.

"Language research conducted by Oxford Dictionaries editors reveals that the frequency of the word selfie in the English language has increased by 17,000% since this time last year," Oxford wrote in justifying its choice.

"Selfie" beat out seven competitors, including "twerk," "schmeat" (synthetically produced meat) and "bitcoin" for the Word of the Year crown.

"Selfie" is not slouching on its thrown, Oxford says of its word of the year.

It has spawned herds of images on social media. There are 57 million photos bearing its hashtag -- #selfie -- on Instagram alone.

There is even a user account called "selfie." And, yes, it contains nothing but selfies.

"Selfie" has also been busy pumping out offspring in its namesake.

It has given birth to "helfie" -- a photo of one's own hair; "belfie" -- a snapshot of one's own backside; and "welfie" -- a selfie taken while working out, aka the most annoying kind.

There's also the "drelfie" -- a photo of yourself when you're drunk.

Fitting, since a drelfie in Australia was the first "selfie" that ever bore the name.

12 comments:

  1. Ok lang. It's not as if it was unexpected anyway

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Vanity...... It's my favorite sin. - Devil from Devils advocate
      Ending music: "I see a red door and I want to paint it black" LSS kayo noh

      Delete
  2. It's between selfie and twerk....selfie it is

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kim Kardashian's legacy ... lol!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Disagree! It still should be "S3X" bilang ma L ang lahat ng tao lalo na ang mga kabataan...yun na! Paaaak!

    ReplyDelete
  5. selfie. Nagsasariling sikap

    ReplyDelete
  6. selfie nga kya magisa lang. eh bakit my kasama ung mga pic.

    ReplyDelete
  7. ayaw ni iya villania niyan! SELFIE!

    ReplyDelete
  8. "Selfie" is not slouching on its thrown, Oxford says of its word of the year.

    *throne. I can't believe CNN made that grammatical error. :/

    ReplyDelete

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...