You may have heard that the Oxford dictionary’s "word of the year” this year was "brain rot.” ...
According to Physician's Weekly, recent studies have linked excessive online content consumption to cognitive and mental ...
But despite the nation's love for comedy, Sir David recently shared that one joke featured in Only Fools and Horses would never be aired now. Writing in his recent autobiography, This Time Next Year, ...
Every year, the Oxford Dictionary selects a word or phrase they believe represents the themes and conversations of that year. For 2024, they chose “brain rot.” It’s a term often ...
Just before the general election, gambling podcast Bet The House introduced listeners to a 'political betting expert' who was ...
By Roger J. Kreuz Ever since the American Dialect Society selected a Word of the Year at its conference in 1990, over half a dozen English dictionaries have anointed an annual word or phrase that’s ...
The word of the year for 2024 should have been “billionaire.” It infested virtually every story about presidential politics.
It says something about the past year when the people who put out the Oxford Dictionary chose “brain rot” as the words of ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
OED’s word of 2024 refers to the deterioration of a person’s mental state by overconsuming online content. Scroll staffers ...
Brain rot” has been declared the Oxford Dictionary’s word of the year. The term is defined as “the supposed deterioration of ...
Do people even read the newspaper anymore? In company with the Merriam-Webster word of the year “polarization,” often used to describe the divided state of the country, and the Oxford word of the year ...