The word on fiscal cliff and YOLO is out
Whether or not the US Congress acts to avoid the âfiscal cliff,â the much-used phrase tops the list of words language aficionados want banned from everyday speech, according to a Michigan universityâs yearly roundup released on Monday.
Also making the cut for Lake Superior State Universityâs annual list of overused, misused and generally useless terms were âkick the can down the road,â âbucket listâ and, it may come as no surprise, âspoiler alert.â
Then there is âYOLO.â
âStands for âYou Only Live Onceâ and used by wannabe Twitter philosophers who think theyâve uncovered a deep secret of life,â said Brendan Cotter, of Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan, in nominating the phrase for retirement.
âI only live once, so Iâd prefer to be able to do it without ever seeing YOLO again,â Mr Cotter said.
The small public university has published its annual âList of Words to be Banished from the Queenâs English for Misuse, Overuse and General Uselessnessâ since New Yearâs Day in 1976. It is culled mostly from nominations by English-language enthusiasts through the schoolâs website.
But donât call them âgurusâ â the term is among the dozen words and phrases on this yearâs list they want eliminated from the news, advertising, politics and general usage.
Fiscal cliff â a short-hand reference to the mix of $600 billion in tax increases and federal government spending cuts due to begin taking effect in January â received the most nominations in 2012, the school said.
âYou canât turn on the news without hearing this,â said Christopher Loiselle of Midland, Michigan, in his submission.
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