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Dictionary Picks 'Unfriend' As Word Of The Year

The New Oxford American Dictionary's 2009 Word of the Year can trace its origins back to the 17th century. The word: "unfriend."

Christine Lindberg, senior lexicographer at Oxford University Press, says the Oxford English Dictionary provides a citation for "unfriend" from 1659.

Lindberg says the essence of the meaning has not changed much since the word was first cited.

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"I think it's a remarkable resurrection," she tells NPR's Melissa Block. "In a way, I look at 'unfriend' as the Sleeping Beauty of 2009 words."

For the uninitiated, to "unfriend" is the act of removing someone who was previously your "friend" on a social media network, especially Facebook.

"Unfriend" beat out "sexting" (sending sexually explicit text/pictures over the cell phone), birther (a conspiracy theorist who challenges President Obama's U.S. birth certificate) and tramp stamp (tattoo on lower back, usually on a woman).

Past words of the year include 2008's hypermiling (driving to maximize fuel economy), 2007's locavore (one who tries to eat locally grown food), carbon neutral (2006) and podcast (2005).

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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