davieG Posted 21 May 2015 Posted 21 May 2015 Thousands of new words - including slang terms lolz, shizzle and obs - have been added to the latest Scrabble word list, its publisher has said. About 6,500 words have been added to the latest Collins Scrabble Word List, including a number of slang terms used on social media and in text messages. New words include twerking, emoji, bezzy and ridic - short for ridiculous. One the highest scoring new entries is quinzhee - an Inuit snow shelter - which scores 29 Scrabble points. Other new words now acceptable in the board game include onesie, devo - short for devolution - vape, and shootie, meaning a fashionable shoe that covers the ankle. Eew, yeesh, waahNew words involving technology include facetime, hashtag, and sexting, while exclamations such as augh, blech, eew, grr, waah and yeesh have also been added. It is the first update to the list since 2011. New entries - along with what the word scores in Scrabble - include: Dench - meaning excellent - 11 points Geocache - a recreation activity which sees contenders searching for hidden containers, using GPS - 16 points Lotsa - meaning lots of - 5 points Newb - short for newbie - 9 points Thanx - short for thank you - 15 points Hacktivist - a person who hacks computer systems for political reasons - 22 points Cazh - meaning casual - 18 points Checkbox - a small clickable box on a computer screen - 28 points The Scrabble dictionary includes words from Australia, Canada, South Africa, the UK and the US in a single list. "Dictionaries have always included formal and informal English, but it used to be hard to find printed evidence of the use of slang words," Helen Newstead, head of language content at Collins, said. "Now people use slang in social media posts, tweets, blogs, comments, text messages - you name it - so there's a host of evidence for informal varieties of English that simply didn't exist before."
Rincewind Posted 21 May 2015 Posted 21 May 2015 In time even my typos will be accepted. I don't know a lot of the ones used now without adding more.
Rincewind Posted 21 May 2015 Posted 21 May 2015 New words are always being added to dictionaries. The English language has changed quite a lot since the 15th century.
Trav Le Bleu Posted 21 May 2015 Posted 21 May 2015 I, and everyone I've chatted to in an on-line game, have always spelt "newb" as "noob". I'm thinking they've changed it cos it doesn't score much spelt that way.
ramboacdc Posted 21 May 2015 Posted 21 May 2015 Quinzhee - shelter made from hollowed-out snow (29 points) no!
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