Hey! Hey! Wonderful to see you today. Thanks for dropping out of cyberspace. Lo and behold, you landed right next to the coffeepot. Good planning, eh! Now...hold your mobile phone up and take a picture of yourself pouring coffee into your mug. Then, another 'selfie' as you hoist a virtual megamuffin onto your plate.
The word 'selfie' beat out such new terms as 'twerk', 'binge-watch' and 'showrooming' to earn the distinction of being named new word of the year 2013. The selfie - a self-picture - has grown in popularity over recent months as millions of people, including celebrities and even the Pope, have posted them online.
One of the most famous selfies this year was the Pope posing with teenagers at the Vatican. The picture went viral on social media and was widely speculated as being the first ever "Papal selfie".
An eye-brow raising selfie was taken by Samantha Cameron's sister on the morning of her wedding day, revealing David Cameron napping on a four-poster bed in the background.
Selfies hit the headlines this week when a woman from Plymouth claimed that a burglar had broken into her flat and taken a selfie on her phone. The woman subsequently realised she had invited the man in for coffee.
A number of spin-off terms are also in circulation, such as helfie (a picture of someone's hair), belfie (a picture of someone's behind), welfie (a picture of someone working out) and drelfie (a drunken selfie).
Judy Pearsall, editorial director for Oxford Dictionaries, said: "Using the Oxford Dictionaries language research programme, we can see a phenomenal upward trend in the use of selfie in 2013, and this helped to cement its selection as Word of the Year."
She added: "Social media sites helped to popularise the term, with the hashtag #selfie appearing on the photo-sharing website Flickr as early as 2004, but usage wasn't widespread until around 2012, when selfie was being used commonly in mainstream media sources."
The frequency of the word selfie in the English language has increased by 17,000% since this time last year, according to research conducted by Oxford Dictionaries editors.
This figure is calculated by Oxford Dictionaries using a research programme which collects around 150 million English words currently in use from around the web each month.
This software can be used to track the emergence of new words and monitor changes in geography, register, and frequency of use.
Selfie is under consideration for inclusion in the Oxford English Dictionary.
The shortlist for Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year 2013 included binge-watch (to watch multiple episodes of a television programme in rapid succession), showrooming (the practice of examining a product at a shop before buying it online at a lower price) and twerk (dancing in a sexually provocative manner by thrusting hip movements and adopting a low, squatting stance).
I have to admit it...I have taken the odd selfie or two. Good way to break the camera! Well, I mean, it's, like, so easy and well the subject is so...what can I say?
See ya, eh!
Bob
The word 'selfie' beat out such new terms as 'twerk', 'binge-watch' and 'showrooming' to earn the distinction of being named new word of the year 2013. The selfie - a self-picture - has grown in popularity over recent months as millions of people, including celebrities and even the Pope, have posted them online.
One of the most famous selfies this year was the Pope posing with teenagers at the Vatican. The picture went viral on social media and was widely speculated as being the first ever "Papal selfie".
An eye-brow raising selfie was taken by Samantha Cameron's sister on the morning of her wedding day, revealing David Cameron napping on a four-poster bed in the background.
Selfies hit the headlines this week when a woman from Plymouth claimed that a burglar had broken into her flat and taken a selfie on her phone. The woman subsequently realised she had invited the man in for coffee.
A number of spin-off terms are also in circulation, such as helfie (a picture of someone's hair), belfie (a picture of someone's behind), welfie (a picture of someone working out) and drelfie (a drunken selfie).
Judy Pearsall, editorial director for Oxford Dictionaries, said: "Using the Oxford Dictionaries language research programme, we can see a phenomenal upward trend in the use of selfie in 2013, and this helped to cement its selection as Word of the Year."
She added: "Social media sites helped to popularise the term, with the hashtag #selfie appearing on the photo-sharing website Flickr as early as 2004, but usage wasn't widespread until around 2012, when selfie was being used commonly in mainstream media sources."
The frequency of the word selfie in the English language has increased by 17,000% since this time last year, according to research conducted by Oxford Dictionaries editors.
This figure is calculated by Oxford Dictionaries using a research programme which collects around 150 million English words currently in use from around the web each month.
This software can be used to track the emergence of new words and monitor changes in geography, register, and frequency of use.
Selfie is under consideration for inclusion in the Oxford English Dictionary.
The shortlist for Oxford Dictionaries Word of the Year 2013 included binge-watch (to watch multiple episodes of a television programme in rapid succession), showrooming (the practice of examining a product at a shop before buying it online at a lower price) and twerk (dancing in a sexually provocative manner by thrusting hip movements and adopting a low, squatting stance).
I have to admit it...I have taken the odd selfie or two. Good way to break the camera! Well, I mean, it's, like, so easy and well the subject is so...what can I say?
See ya, eh!
Bob
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