direct air capture

There have been various carbon capture schemes proposed.  In DAC (direct air capture) the air is sucked into a system which filters out carbon dioxide which is then stored, usually in deep geological formations, or else reused in other processes. 

ZG: 5

Yet another way of reducing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Who knows if it will work or not!

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Sue ButlerComment
solar garden

The solar garden allows people who, for a variety of reasons, are not able to have the benefit of rooftop solar panels, to buy a portion of a solar panel array and profit from the energy produced and fed to the grid.

ZG: 5

Our first solar garden is just being launched so this does not have high frequency yet, but the enthusiasm of renters may well make it big.

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Sue ButlerComment
phonk

This is a music genre which dates back to the 1990s in the Southern US but which has, in the last couple of years, become mainstream at least for the Twitter generation.

ZG: 8

High frequency in a particular section of the community.

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Sue ButlerComment
kinkeeping

This is the work of maintaining the social connections within an extended family.  It has in the past been done largely by women.

ZG: 7

This was an item of academic jargon until it hit the mainstream in social media.

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Sue ButlerComment
marine cloud brightening

Way back in 2018 I spoke about cloud brightening, the process of adding salt crystals to clouds which would then better reflect the rays of the sun, reduce the amount of sunlight falling on the earth, and ameliorate the effects of climate warming.

ZG: 4

If this works the term could get much higher frequency.

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Sue ButlerComment
crisis profits

These are profits earned above and beyond the expectations that a company would have in normal conditions.  They are a form of windfall profits but somehow that name conjures up a vision of apples strewn across the lawn under the tree after a high wind — something unexpected but pleasant. 

ZG: 4

This is a piece of economics jargon which probably does not have high frequency although the lived experience is something that troubles us all.

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Sue ButlerComment
seekRNA

A research team at Sydney University , led by Dr Sandro Ataido (pictured above), has now devised a new method of editing genes where the deletion and insertion is done as one process.

ZG: 3

This is low frequency at the moment but is set to become as well known as CRISPR.

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Sue ButlerComment
FLuQE

Have you had cold-like symptoms lately?  It could be influenza, RSV, mycoplasma pneumonia (otherwise known as micro pneumonia), walking pneumonia, whooping cough or Covid.  Or it could just be a cold. If it is Covid then it could be FLiRT but is more likely now to be FLuQE. 

ZG: 5

We are getting very good at picking up the names of the variants and subvariants of Covid.

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Sue ButlerComment
deadbot

This is a chatbot that imitates a person who is dead, usually at the request of someone who loves them and doesn’t want to let them go.  It follows the path of creating customised chatbots.

ZG: 3

Not everyone wants to deal with the death of a loved one in this way.

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Sue ButlerComment
hobby horsing

The exciting news is that the first state championship in Australia will be held near Brisbane this year.  Why do I hesitate to say that hobby horsing is a sport? It does, after all, involve a fair degree of athleticism to jump hurdles in a horsy way and perform the fancy manoeuvres of dressage and to go on hobby horse endurance rides, but that is just half of it.

ZG: 4

As the enthusiasm for hobby horsing catches on, the frequecy of the jargon will rise.

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Sue Butler Comment
fart walk

We should all take one after a meal is the latest recommendation.  It seems that remaining sedentary is the worst thing we can do if we suffer from bloating, irritable bowel, and all the other discomfits of a cranky gut.

ZG: 4

it is one of the latest trends in the American monetising of health and wellbeing that has reached out shores.

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Sue ButlerComment
obituary pirate

In the past obituaries were written for people who were dead (although possibly prepared beforehand while they were still alive).  But we are now being given obituaries of people who are still alive. Not even a tiny bit sick.

ZG: 4

There are so many different scams online it is becoming difficult to keep up with them.

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Sue ButlerComment
low altitude economy

This is the economic activity which is set to flourish in the space from 1000 to 4000 metres above the earth, where drones, UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicle), eVTOLs (electric vertical take off and landing vehicles) and eSTOLs (electric short take off and landing vehicles) will operate.

ZG: 3

There is interest but not much activity in this sector at the moment, but all that will change.

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Sue ButlerComment
porn passport

The digital rights group Electronic Frontiers are credited with giving this name to the regulations and controls being suggested by the government  to prevent children from accessing pornography online. 

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Sue ButlerComment
FLiRT

There was a tug-of-war between a truly accurate identification and a name that the general public can remember. Now we have a group of subvariants deriving from a variant of the Omicron strain of the virus (called JN.1) which have been given the name FLiRT. 

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Sue ButlerComment
xeriscaping

Denver Water (Denver, Colorado) coined this word in 1981, the same year that the Macquarie Dictionary was published, but it has taken almost thirty years for it to filter through to us.

ZG: 4

Not a huge take-up yet but the next drought will probably change that.

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Sue ButlerComment
terminal lucidity

There are various neurological conditions which are thought to be non-reversible, conditions such as dementia and Alzheimer’s.  But there is anecdotal evidence dating from the late 1800s of patients who experience a reversal of their symptoms so that they can suddenly remember people, speak clearly, and display lucid thinking. 

ZG: 4

This has great significance for the elderly people who experience it, and their families.

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Sue ButlerComment
Q-day

Remember Y2K?  How we all waited for planes to fall out of the sky, for our computers to implode, for every computerised device in the world to implode. And then nothing happened. The next tech scare on the horizon is Q-day!

ZG: 5

There are murmurings about Q-day at the moment but it is still a fair way off. Frequency will increase as we get closer.

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Sue ButlerComment
agrihood

This is a neighbourhood which has a farm or community garden at the heart of it, so that people can produce their own food in close proximity to where they live.

ZG: 6

Not a high-frequency item yet since we wait for more of these to be developed.

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Sue ButlerComment
financial sovereignty

Remember the sovereign citizen of COVID days?  Well, this sovereign citizen also claims that they do not have to pay any tax. 

ZG: 4

There are occasional noisy outbursts from the sovereign citizens but the frequency of this term is not high.

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Sue ButlerComment