The American Dialect Society's word of the year

#Blacklivesmatter

(Image credit: (Andrew Burton/Getty Images))

For the 25th year, the American Dialect Society has chosen a word of the year by a live and occasionally rowdy vote in a roomful of linguists at their annual conference. Here are some of the words that made an impact this year.

1. #BLACKLIVESMATTER (WORD OF THE YEAR)

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2. EVEN (MOST USEFUL)

An old word with a new interesting use for the meaning "to deal with or reconcile difficult situations or emotions." It comes from the phrase "I can't even," and has branched into related phrases like "I have lost the ability to even" and "what even."

3. BUDTENDER

Even won over another popular contender, budtender, meaning "person who specializes in serving marijuana to consumers, especially in legal dispensaries."

4. EIT (MOST EUPHEMISTIC)

EIT is short for "Enhanced Interrogation Technique," already itself a euphemism, making it so euphemistic it even beat out conscious uncoupling, a term for "a divorce or romantic separation by polite mutual agreement."

5. COLUMBUSING (MOST CREATIVE)

Columbusing refers to "cultural appropriation, especially the act of a white person claiming to discover things already known to minority cultures."

6. NARCISSISTICK

In the "most creative" category, narcissistick "a pejorative term for a selfie stick," proved to be so unpopular, it was moved to the "most unnecessary" category.

7. BAELESS (MOST UNNECESSARY)

Narcissistick still lost, this time to baeless, "without a romantic partner."

8. PLATISHER (LEAST LIKELY TO SUCCEED)

Platisher was a word coined for an "online media publisher that also serves as a platform for creating content." All agreed it was way too awkward (and evocative of a platypus) to stick around much longer.

Arika Okrent is editor-at-large at TheWeek.com and a frequent contributor to Mental Floss. She is the author of In the Land of Invented Languages, a history of the attempt to build a better language. She holds a doctorate in linguistics and a first-level certification in Klingon. Follow her on Twitter.