Merriam-Webster recently made 690 additions to its dictionary, and honestly, we’re still processing them.
Some newly legitimized words are long overdue:
Some words, though, just feel like Merriam-Webster is now a living Steve Buscemi meme:
… whereas ours is business and tech, so we’ll stick there and run down the reference tome’s newest entries within our nerdom:
Generative AI (noun): artificial intelligence capable of generating new content (such as images or text) in response to a prompt.
Smishing (noun): the practice of texting someone in order to trick them into revealing confidential information which can then be used for criminal purposes.
’Grammable (adjective): suitable to be posted on Instagram.
Edgelord (noun): someone who makes exaggerated statements online with the intent of shocking others.
Finsta (noun): a secret or incognito Instagram account.
Meme stock (noun): a stock that experiences a temporary surge in popularity and price due to a coordinated effort by small investors.
P.S. There were plenty more business and tech-related inclusions — e.g., “large language model,” “passkey,” “quiet quit,” “girlboss,” and “microtransaction” — but they were just too hard to work into sentences featuring jorts.