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Oxford laps up YOLO, Oompa Loompa

English dictionary jingles with 1,000 more terms and phrases.

London: ‘YOLO’ and ‘Clicktivism’ are among more than 1,000 new entries added by the Oxford English Dictionary in its latest quaterly update.

The update also marks the centenary of the birth of British novelist Roald Dahl with a range of new words connected to his writing including ‘splendiferous’, ‘human bean’, ‘Oompa Loompa’ and ‘Dahlesque’.

The Oompa Loompas, Willy Wonka’s diminutive workers, became fixed in the popular imagination as green-haired and orange-skinned thanks to the 1971 film adaptation of Dahl’s popular book — Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

The adjective ‘Dahlesque’ makes its first appearance in the Oxford dictionary this month with a first quotation from 1983 in which a collection of stories is praised for its “Dahlesque delight in the bizarre”.

“These new additions provide Dahl fans with a golden ticket to the first uses and historical development of words like scrumdiddlyumptious, for those occasions when scrumptious simply won’t do, and the ‘human bean’, which is not a vegetable, although — according to the Dahl’s Big Friendly Giant — it comes in ‘dillions of different flavours’,” said Jonathan Dent, senior assistant editor of the Oxford English Dictionary.

The acronym YOLO (1996) is traced back to its axiomatic ‘you only live once’ — first used in a 19th-century English translation of Le Cousin Pons, a French book by Honore de Balzac. The word ‘moobs’ also features in the latest update, describing “embarrassing male appendages”.

( Source : Agencies )
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