Oxford Dictionaries declares 'Youthquake' Word of the Year

Oxford Dictionaries said the word sounded a note of hope after what it described as a 'difficult and divisive year'

IANS  |  London 

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Dictionaries has declared "Youthquake" as 2017's Word of the Year, reflecting what it calls a "political awakening" among millennial voters, the media reports on Friday.

It was first coined in the 1960s by Vogue editor, Diana Vreeland, who used it to describe sudden changes in fashion, music, and attitudes, reports the BBC.

The English defines as the "series of radical political and cultural upheavals occurring among students and young people in the 1960s".

Dictionaries said late Thursday that its use had seen a recent resurgence, to describe young people driving political change.

Dictionaries' said it was "not an obvious choice".

But he said Youthquake's use in everyday speech had increased five-fold during 2017.

"In the UK, where it rose to prominence as a descriptor of the impact of the country's young people on its general election, calls it out as a word on the move," he said.

Grathwohl said youthquake's use in Britain peaked during the June general election, after polls delivered a better-than-expected result for the

Dictionaries said the word sounded a note of hope after what it described as a "difficult and divisive year".

The is a word, or expression, that Dictionaries deems has "attracted a great deal of interest during the year to date" and is drawn from newspapers, books, blogs and transcripts of spoken English, the BBC reported.

Last year's word, "post-truth", was chosen after the 2016 Brexit vote and Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election.    

First Published: Fri, December 15 2017. 16:07 IST