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‘Obama’ as a Word Enters the English Language

 

 

Presidential names that have made the leap

include

 Jeffersonian, 
Lincolnesque, Nixonian,

and Clintonesque

 Usage Includes:

  • Obamamentum,
  • Obamacize,
  • ObamaBot (new!)
  • Obamarama,
  • ObamaNation,
  • Obamanomics,
  • Obamican,
  • Obamafy,
  • Obamamania,
  • Obamacam
  • and growing ...

  Watch the CNN Segment

San Diego
, California, (March 3, 2008) The latest word to enter the English language is ‘obama’ in its many variations, according to the Global Language Monitor (GLM), (www.LanguageMonitor.com).  GLM tracks the growth and evolution of the English language around the globe.  The word is derived from the name, Barack Obama, the Senator from Illinois, and a top contender for the Democratic nomination for the US Presidency.  Obama- is used as a ‘root’ for an ever-expanding number of words, including obamamentum, obamacize, obamabot, obamarama, obamaNation, obamanomics, obamican, obamafy, obamamania, and obamacam.  The list is growing.

In August 2007, GLM noted that ‘obama’ had become a political buzzword, ranking No. 2 on its Top Political Buzzwords list of the 2008 Presidential Campaign. 

Presidential names that have made the leap include Jeffersonian, Lincolnesque, Nixonian, and Clintonesque (referring to former president Bill Clinton). 

According to Paul JJ Payack, GLM’s president and chief word analyst, “To enter the English language, a word has to meet certain criteria, including:  frequency of appearance in the written and spoken language, in the media, have a large geographic footprint, and to stand the test of time.  In the past, this process would unfold over many years, even decades or centuries.  However, the Internet, with instant global communication to billions of people has radically accelerated the cycle.”   Many names have made the leap into the language, including OK (from the nickname US President Martin Van Buren “Old Kinderhook”); jacuzzi, kodak, macadam, Caesarian section (after Julius Caesar); decibel (the measure of sound), Hertz, and frisbee.

The Global Language Monitor uses a proprietary algorithm, the Predictive Quantities Indicator (PQI) to track the frequency of words and phrases in the global print and electronic media, on the Internet, throughout the Blogosphere, as well as accessing proprietary databases.  The PQI is a weighted Index, factoring in: long-term trends, short-term changes, momentum, and velocity.  

Currently, GLM is counting the number of words in the English Language.  The Million Word March currently stands just short of the million-word mark at 995,118.

The English Language currently has some 1.35 billion speakers as a first, second or auxiliary language.