Hard News: Public Address Word of the Year 2014
269 Responses
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And I predict another blog-related word might trend within the next 3 years: rancid.
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Oxford dictionaries WoY was "vape"
Collins came up with Photobomb
As for twerk, it is far far better as
image of the year -
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
running away with the circuits...
This makes me yell at my transistor every time.
Perhaps you need some resistors...
;- ) -
Ewan Morris, in reply to
Do you have an appropriate NZ alternative for beltway, given it get used as an analogy rather than literally?
Can you have an analogy with something that doesn't exist? At least there is a beltway in Washington.
Given the number of quays in central Wellington (Lambton, Waterloo, Thorndon, Aotea), how about Quay - "That is such a Quay issue" ;-)
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paul drone, in reply to
How about #teamquay?
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I’m sorry but it has to be Dirty Politics possibly the #dirtypolitics version or the verb as Giovanni suggests. The PAS thread with this heading started in August, is still active and today is up to 156,000 views. Is that a record?
Textual Relations and Beltway would be my second and third choices with Cut the Crap as a late runner.
Perhaps you could just send the prize to Nicky Hagar as the author of the most used phrase this year. Could we also elect him as New Zealander of the Year or even the decade?
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giovanni tiso, in reply to
Cut the Crap as a late runner
I'd love for Cut the Crap to win WOTY2015.
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daleaway, in reply to
As I said on another blog some months ago, Wellington does not have a beltway, but it does have a Quay Ring.
Also a Key Ring.
One is lovely and has shops, and the other is ugly and has Black Ops. -
Carol Stewart, in reply to
Perhaps you need some resistors…
;- )I thought they were futile?
I’d love for Cut the Crap to win WOTY2015.
Me too.
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O'Key, for when it's not Okay.
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Josh Petyt, in reply to
There's no Watergate, AFAIK, but we get the odd ~gate suffixed 'scandal'.
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Johnkey
Not as common as it ought to be considering how often the country's favourite pundit pops up in the media with soundbite after soundbite but this rushed sounding eponymous portmanteau gets me every time.
Unfortunately I think ISIS might be the killer word of the year. (Pun intended).
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weka, in reply to
Can you have an analogy with something that doesn’t exist? At least there is a beltway in Washington.
That's why it's analogy of something that does exist, and it's why people use it.
Interestingly Thorndon Bubble means far less to me, as it's never been part of my milieu (had no idea what Thorndon was until you said).
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weka, in reply to
Johnkey
There's Jokeyhen too.
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
far canal...
send the prize to Nicky Hagar
Nicky Hager will be heading to Venice for the Biennale next year, as an adviser on Simon Denny's NZ contribution 'Secret Power'...
Though what a shame to see Jenny Gibbs redirecting her 'Medici-like arts patronage' away from this because she doesn't like Hager's involvement - at least she is still donating to ex-hubby's hobby party ACT. - putting the ART in Partisan for the pissants...
Guess they won't be sending an Aquada over for local transport.:- (
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nzlemming, in reply to
Given the number of quays in central Wellington (Lambton, Waterloo, Thorndon, Aotea), how about Quay – “That is such a Quay issue” ;-)
People other than David Farrar (who really, really wants to be NZ's Karl Rove) sometimes refer to it as the Thorndon Bubble, being the line between the Cenotaph and Premier House and some side offices on the Terrace (Treasury, DPMC and SSC, as well as the Reserve Bank). It's also full of hot air.
Farrar and co are desperate to control the framing of discussions so they work hard to make sure their words are used by the media - it means the media are more receptive to churning National's press releases if they're written in the same language. The Quays are where real people work, live and shop, not the politicians.
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Chocolate Milk
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Bart Janssen, in reply to
I’m sorry but it has to be Dirty Politics possibly the #dirtypolitics version or the verb as Giovanni suggests. The PAS thread with this heading started in August, is still active and today is up to 156,000 views. Is that a record?
A big part of me agrees, odds are I'll vote for it. But then two things strike me, first is that while it got a little bit of notice outside NZ, it really is a local issue. Most of the planet would just go, Huh?
Not that that should matter, this is a local competition, it is after all about what NZ cares about. Which brings me to my second problem with dirtypolitics this year.
The majority of New Zealanders didn't care enough to get rid of the dirty politicians - how can a word be a word of the year if it had no real effect even in New Zealand.
If it had made a difference to politics sure. If it had changed a government definitely. But it didn't do either of those things this year ... sadly.
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Sansabelt ...
Thorndon Bubble
how about the 'Bowen Triangle" ?
I hear moral compasses just don't work in the area... -
Something from the entertainment desk - no, not NZ politics but acting, criminals, "the suspension of reality" and devious plots. Oh wait that is National politics...
Uncoupling
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nzlemming, in reply to
how about the ’Bowen Triangle” ?
That works too, and many a good policy has been lost in it...
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Glove-puppets
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weka, in reply to
The majority of New Zealanders didn’t care enough to get rid of the dirty politicians – how can a word be a word of the year if it had no real effect even in New Zealand.
If Dirty Politics had no real effect then why is it likely to be top of the list? Why is it still being discussed, still being referenced, and still affecting the political process and media in NZ? It's now a core reference point for everything else that happens. That's huge.
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I think of Dirty Politics as a book title rather than a word. It's used to describe an issue, rather than used in sentences. That's not to downplay its impressive impact on political discourse.
I think "hacker" or 'hack" deserves a plug because it's got international and local currency, and has reach beyond the election period, and its meaning is contested to stretch from someone who can get into secured computer systems to someone who can guess your password or use your profile after you've failed to log off.
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Sacha, in reply to
I think of Dirty Politics as a book title rather than a word. It's used to describe an issue, rather than used in sentences.
Perhaps makes more sense in compressed environments like Twitter.
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