Repetition confirms refudiation's reputation

LOS ANGELES – “Spillcam” and “vuvuzela” were the top words of 2010, reflecting the global impact of the oil spill in the Gulf…

LOS ANGELES – “Spillcam” and “vuvuzela” were the top words of 2010, reflecting the global impact of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that went on for months and the noisy South African horns at the World Cup soccer tournament, according to a survey released yesterday.

“Refudiate” – a word coined by US politician Sarah Palin in a cross between refute and repudiate – also made the top 10, according to the annual Global Language Monitor survey.

The Texas-based survey uses a mathematical formula to track the frequency of words and phrases in the English-speaking world of more than 1.58 billion people.

It declared that President Hu Jintao of China and Apple’s iPad were the two top names of the year on a list that also featured “Chilean coal miners”, reflecting the worldwide fascination with the televised rescue in October of 33 men trapped deep in a mine.

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“Anger and rage” among voters from the US to Greece was deemed the most popular phrase of 2010. “Obamania”, one of the biggest phrases of the past two years, ranked in 10th place.

“Our top words this year come from an environmental disaster, the World Cup, political malapropisms, news sense to ancient words, a booming economic colossus and a heroic rescue that captivated the world for days on end,” said Paul JJ Payack, president of the Global Language Monitor.

Spillcam became a household phrase describing the live video of the ruptured sea well in the Gulf of Mexico that earlier this year led to the world’s biggest offshore oil spill.

Vuvuzela, the brightly coloured plastic horns with a monotonous droning sound, became the hallmark of the World Cup soccer tournament in South Africa. They were later banned from major European soccer competitions.

In politics, Tea Party, the US grass-roots political movement, made both the 2010 top phrases and top names list. “Man up!” – a signature retort from US political women to male opponents, made its first entry.

Pop singer Lady Gaga, 3D (movies), the "great recession", MTV reality show Jersey Shoreand its Italian-American young guidos and guidettes also made the 2010 list. – (Reuters)