Dictionary.com’s latest Word of the Year might just be the most baffling one yet. The 2025 winner isn’t really a word—it’s “67.” If you're confused, so are we, but here's our best attempt at ...
Trump: We've done so much, energy is way down. Look at energy. We'll have $2 gas. That brings everything else down. Groceries ...
A Venezuelan-born Cardiff entrepreneur who taught himself English is targeting revenues of £3m for his tech venture that ...
The use of artificial intelligence is leading to a flattening of our language that is evident in the emails we write and the texts we compose. Studies have already confirmed this. Robotic verbiage ...
It’s been a minute, but the 67 meme is just not going away. In fact, Dictionary.com last week announced that it’s the site’s ...
Similar to how people from different parts of the world have accents, social media creators who reside in the online world ...
Some of the words are cutesy (kerfuffle, jubilee). Others are onomatopoeic, with a similar sound to the idea they’re describing (meow, clink, squeak). Some are bizarre sounding (for example, syzygy: ...
Beneath Nigeria’s digital landscape lies a shadowy and expanding underworld, a network of tech-savvy middlemen and pimps preying on young boys and girls ...
A longtime journalist who lives in AU Park, Fatsis is best known for his book Word Freak, about the world of competitive ...
Parents and teachers cover your ears. Dictionary.com says its word of the year is “6-7.” The viral term is one kids and ...