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      |  |  | The Million Word March
        (Or Maybe April)by Mad Dog
 
 
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      | A million words is way more than any dictionary includes.
        Most standard dictionaries define about 200,000 words. The Oxford
        English Dictionary (motto: “More words than you can shake a cudgel
        at”) has about 600,000.
 |  | By the end of April, the
        English language will be one million words strong. At least it will be
        if you believe the Global Language Monitor, an organization that uses
        live people combined with computer algorithms and chicken entrails
        tossed into a fairy circle during the full moon to track trends in
        language around the world.    According to them, English picks up a
        new word every 98 minutes, which is about 15 a day, 105 a week, or just
        enough to make my spellchecker feel really dumb, and if there’s
        anything worse than a spellchecker with low self-esteem it’s a user
        who thinks anthropomorphism in computer programs is okay to talk about
        in public. They don’t say anything about words being kicked out, so we
        can assume English is the packrat of languages and it only gets bigger,
        with towering piles of old words stacked everywhere. I never realized
        how much English was like my grandfather.    A million words is a lot, even though
        it’s only about 1/750,000th the number of dollars the government
        handed out in an effort to make sure George Bush doesn’t wind up being
        known as the Herbert Hoover of the New Millennium. On the other hand,
        when you consider that the new TV show, Million Dollar Password,
        is giving away—go ahead, guess!—yes, a million dollars, maybe it’s
        not such a big number after all. But to paraphrase Everett Dirksen, “A
        million words here, a million words there, pretty soon you’re talking
        about not being able to finish a crossword puzzle.”
 
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      | What could we possibly do with 980,000 more words? Where
        would we put them all? As it is I’m afraid that if I stuff one more
        thing into the right side of my head my social security number’s going
        to fall out my left ear.
 |  | A million words is way more than any dictionary includes. Most
        standard dictionaries define about 200,000 words. The Oxford English
        Dictionary (motto: “More words than you can shake a cudgel at”) has
        about 600,000, and it takes 22,000 pages in 20 volumes and two hernias
        to list them all. That means either the Global Language Monitor has
        heard words the OED people haven’t, they lost count after
        “obfuscation” and don’t want to admit it, or they make up words
        knowing no one’s going to go through a vocabulary list of a million
        words.    While that sounds like a lot of
        words, stop and consider that there are 1.35 billion people on Earth who
        speak English. That means there’s only one word for every 1,350
        speakers. I don’t know about you, but I’d hate to find out I was one
        of those people who didn’t have their own word, though should that
        happen I’d make one up just so I could feel important. Maybe a word
        like grobbish. Or pongroid. If I could convince the Global Language
        Monitor to recognize these then I’ve just managed to push the Million
        Word Day a little bit closer. Heck, with some thought and mittens on my
        hands when I type I could probably manage to single-handedly move the
        date up to next Tuesday.    The question is, do we really need a
        million words? The average American knows about 20,000 words but only
        uses 7,500 of them in a given day. This means that on most days we have
        a storehouse of 12,500 unused words gathering dust in the crannies of
        our cerebellum. Or should I say, the recesses of our mind. That being
        the case, what could we possibly do with 980,000 more of them? Where
        would we put them all? As it is I’m afraid that if I stuff one more
        thing into the right side of my head my social security number’s going
        to fall out my left ear. Heck, even Shakespeare knew only about 60,000
        words, and half the time we don’t have a clue what he’s saying
        without listening to a podcast of the CliffsNotes. If he’d known a
        million words even Cliff wouldn’t be able to figure out what he was
        saying.
 
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      | While
        they’re predicting the date, they’re not predicting what the
        millionth word will be. It’s a safe bet it will be something we’ve
        never heard before. And very likely something we won’t hear again in
        six months.
 |  | I’m not sure what most of the new words that are popping up
        every 98 minutes are, but I’m sure they’re things like repurpose,
        ginormous, hella—and its grade school equivalent, hecka—and
        Obamalovefest, which may or may not last depending on whether bankruptcy
        becomes the leveraged buyout of the decade. Either way I’d better stop
        on the way home tonight and pick up some flash cards if I’m going to
        have any hope of keeping up. Or ever winning at Scrabble again. But keep
        in mind that just because a word enters the language it doesn’t mean
        it’s going to last. I mean, they can’t all be grody, Y2K, and
        Macarenas, you know.    The Global Language Monitor estimates
        that the millionth word will show up around April 29th, but they say it
        could be as soon as March 30th, which makes it very difficult to invite
        people to a Million Word Party. And while they’re predicting the date,
        they’re not predicting what the millionth word will be. It’s a safe
        bet it will be something we’ve never heard before. And very likely
        something we won’t hear again in six months. But that doesn’t mean
        we can’t enjoy it in the meantime. You know, while we’re waiting for
        another ginormous number of hella repurposed words to join the language.
 ©2009 Mad Dog
        Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.These columns appear in better newspapers across the country.
        Read them, they don't use very many words.
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