power mapping

This is a tool that makes clear (by way of visualisation) the relationships of power in an organisation or community which have to be navigated in order to bring about social change.

ZG: 4

This is a specialised term which has gained notice because of the activities of some organisations in gaining undue influence with the government.

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Business, PoliticsSue ButlerComment
tiger-striping

I had to wade through a certain amount of tiger stripe cocktails online in order to find tiger-striping but Google and I got there eventually.  This tiger striping is the practice of alternating an alcoholic drink with a non-alcoholic drink.

ZG: 6

There is something quirky about this coinage which means it is likely to catch on.

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NPC

In gaming an NPC is a non-playable character in the game, one that the players cannot control.  It was originally controlled by the gamemaster or referee, and then later the computer. So to be called an NPC in real life is an insult.

ZG: 6

The word has certainly spread beyond the gaming world but it is still niche.

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ColloquialSue ButlerComment
Pirola

It has been some time since we named our last COVID variant and now we have a new one, nicknamed Pirola.  Its official name from the World Health Organisation is BA.2.86.  It is classified as a variant under monitoring which means that it hasn’t yet made it to being a variant of interest, let alone a variant of concern.

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Sue ButlerComment
Jewface

Jewface is the portrayal of a Jewish person by a non-Jewish person using theatrical makeup and prosthetics.  This has become an issue in the biopic about Leonard Bernstein, Maestro, where  Bradley Cooper, playing the part of Bernstein, has used prosthetics to give himself a bigger nose.

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SocietySue ButlerComment
in one's wheelhouse

The phrase in one’s wheelhouse caught my attention.  Believe it or not, it was used by a toponymist (an expert in placenames) considering the street name Nowhere Else Road. It’s on the Eyre Peninsula. Despite this being in his field of expertise, he remained none the wiser as to the origin of the name.

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ColloquialSue ButlerComment
JOMO

First we had FOMO — the fear of missing out, which kept us in a constant state of anxiety in case there was something big going on and we weren’t part of it.  Now there is JOMO — the joy of missing out.

ZG: 7

JOMO sounds highly desirable but old habits die hard so I think it will always be the lesser acronym.

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the drip

The children sized up their teacher in her bright orange pants and sunflower-patterned top. ‘That looks weird’ said one.  ‘Na, she’s drip!’ said another.  A couple more nodded sagaciously in agreement.  The teacher was nonplussed.

ZG: 6

I would imagine that this one is catching on quickly with the younger generation.

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native advertising

This is essentially advertising, usually digital advertising, which takes on the form and style of the platform that presents it so that it blends seamlessly with the basic content and is pretty well indistinguishable from it. 

ZG: 3

A piece of industry jargon which even specialists in the field do not explain very well but something that could trip us all up.

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Pyrocene

We have come to talk about this latest period of the Holocene as the Anthropocene epcoh, that is, the period where the effects of human activity on the environment are marked.  Now a fire historian, Stephen J Pyne, has suggested a new term, the Pyrocene. 

ZG: 3

Doesn’t have huge frequency yet but it may become adopted as wildfires become more devastating.

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green hushing

It has become fashionable for companies and organisations to claim in their public documents that they are doing wonderful things for the environment.  Climate disclosures and commitments are now being revised in a process that is described as green hushing.

ZG: 6

A term employed by those engaged in environmental watchdog activities.

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overtourism

This is the increase in the number of tourists visiting a tourist destination to the point where it is beyond the capacity of the people who live there to deal with the influx.  In these post-pandemic times travel is once again an option and overtourism is becoming an acute problem.

ZG: 8

I expect a great deal more discussion of over tourism and how to manage it.

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POTS

This is syndrome that has come into prominence because there is a similarity with the symptoms of long COVID.  The acronym stands for postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. 

ZG: 4

A term of the medical world which has surfaced because of the interest in long COVID.

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MedicineSue ButlerComment
ride-or-die

In Australia this expression surfaced in the reality TV  show, The Challenge.  Late 2022 there was a ride-or-die series in which contestants were invited to bring their choice of partner along with them as support, their own particular ride-or-die rather than a partner chosen for them by the producers of the show.

ZG: 4

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slay

The expression You really slay me! dates back to American English of the 1920s so it is fairly traditional slang these days.  You might even seem a bit quaint if you used it.  But there is a new way in which slay is being used adjectivally, as in He is so slay! That movie was slay!  Or as an interjection.  What do you think of the movie? Slay!

ZG: 5

As with all such slang it has huge currency in a particular group.

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hot-flush lit

There is another lit to add to the collection, a genre of novels featuring menopausal women.  A variant on this is the crime sub-genre, hot-flush noir.

ZG: 6

The community of book readers is shrinking as the hot-flush lit is catching on, which means it has a small but enthusiastic group of supporters.

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golf clap

On the golf course spectators are asked to be as quiet as possible.  No sudden loud noises, no loud voices or energetic movements.  This is all set out in the Aberdeen Code of 1783. 

ZG: 5

A fashionable way of expressing disdain that may take off.

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