A Wave of Neologisms Accepted by Websters

In the NYT:

No matter how odd some of the words might seem, the dictionary editors say each has the promise of sticking around in the American vocabulary.

”There will be linguistic conservatives who will turn their nose up at a word like `ginormous,”’ said John Morse, Merriam-Webster’s president. ”But it’s become a part of our language. It’s used by professional writers in mainstream publications. It clearly has staying power.”

One of those naysayers is Allan Metcalf, a professor of English at MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Ill., and the executive secretary of the American Dialect Society.

”A new word that stands out and is ostentatious is going to sink like a lead balloon,” he said. ”It might enjoy a fringe existence.”

But Merriam-Webster traces ginormous back to 1948, when it appeared in a British dictionary of military slang. And in the past several years, its use has become, well, ginormous.