AA: I'm Avi Arditti, with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER
-- our annual look at American English through the eyes and ears of some close
observers.
RS: Members of the American Dialect Society met in San Francisco this
month and chose their "word of the year" for two-thousand-one. But
actually, as executive secretary Allan Metcalf explains, it's not really a
word.
TAPE: CUT ONE -- METCALF/SKIRBLE/ARDITTI
METCALF: "It's the expression '9-11,' and we included in that the
varieties of expression '9-11,' '9-1-1,' and even the date September 11,
referring to all the terrorist events that took place on that day."
SKIRBLE: "And was there much discussion about that, or did that
have a unanimous vote?"
METCALF: "It wasn't unanimous, but in voting for word of the year,
it got about 30 votes out of a total of 50, and the next closest got only 10
votes."
ARDITTI: "And what was that?"
METCALF: "That was the word 'burqa.' Someone proposed that burqa,
although it's not a new word, is new to us and furthermore it has all kinds of
associations with not only the Taleban but also with the situation of women in
Islam and the whole situation in Afghanistan."
SKIRBLE: "What were some other contenders for word of the
year?"
METCALF: "Well, there were just a few that got other votes.
'Theo-terrorism' was one of them, terrorism based on religious attitudes, and
then 'homeland' in its new sense of the country to be defended against
terrorist attacks, that got five votes. 'Theo-terrorism' got four votes.
Another four votes went to 'mis-underestimate,' a small relic of the 'Bushisms'
that before September (eleventh) probably would have been prominent among our
list. And there were two votes for 'ground zero.'"
AA: Terms related to September eleventh also dominated other categories
voted on by the linguists, including "most euphemistic."
TAPE: CUT TWO -- METCALF
"The winner in that was 'daisy-cutter,' the kind of serious bomb
used by the U-S Air Force. It's not that it's a new word, but it was certainly
newly prominent. Most creative was the term 'shoe-icide bomber,' a terrorist
who has a bomb in his shoes."
RS: This year, the American Dialect Society added a special category,
"most inspirational."
TAPE: CUT THREE -- METCALF
"We thought the phrase 'let's roll,' that was said by Todd Beamer
in United Airlines Flight 93, and then was picked up by President Bush, was an
especially inspirational response to the terrorist attacks."
TAPE: CUT FOUR -- BUSH
"We will no doubt face new challenges. But we have our marching
orders. My fellow Americans, let's roll (applause)."
RS: Todd Beamer had been talking to a telephone operator by cell phone.
At the end, the operator heard him say: "Let's roll" -- meaning
"it's time to act."
AA: Passengers on Flight 93 fought back. The airliner -- one of four
planes hijacked on "nine-eleven" -- crashed in a field in
Pennsylvania, averting a possible attack on Washington.
RS: As the focus of the nation changed, so did the nature of the words
submitted by members of the American Dialect Society for their annual
consideration.
TAPE: CUT FIVE -- METCALF/SKIRBLE
METCALF: "We did have some nominations of pre-September eleventh
words, and if there had been no September eleventh, then we would have gone for
words like 'datacasting,' the use of broadcast television signals to send
digital information, or 'desk-rage,' uncontrollable rage in a workplace, or
'interruptible.' Interruptible, an energy company customer who agrees to have
service suspended if supply is short. And that, of course, was a big topic of
conversation last January."
AA: Allan Metcalf of the American Dialect Society, speaking from his
office at MacMurray College in Illinois, where he's an English professor. Now
let's see if you can remember the winner last January for the word of
two-thousand.
RS: That would be "chad" -- those bits of ballot card that
made for such drama in the presidential election.
AA: And that's all for Wordmaster this week. Our e-mail address is
word@voanews.com. We leave you with a song by Neil Young. It's called
"Let's Roll." With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.
MUSIC: "Let's Roll"/Neil Young