![]() ![]() Its bleached use doesn’t require any amount of accuracy, but instead confers emphasis. Its shareable grids connect us, giving us a window into another person’s mental process.Īn infamous example of semantic bleaching involves the word “literally.” In more traditional usage, it describes characterizations that are accurate to the letter (literally). What makes the game Wordle special is its social energy. Opinion Op-Ed: The word on Wordle: It is bringing people together by letting us see into each other’s minds This is the second of Merriam-Webster’s two definitions: “the act or practice of grossly misleading someone especially for one’s own advantage.” By this definition, gaslighting can happen on a single occasion, as long as it’s substantial enough, and deliberate. The general meaning is a bleached one, in that it doesn’t require any extended practice or long-term goals. In the case of the word “gaslight,” the specific meaning is the one that tracks the plot of the movie, involving psychological manipulation over a long period of time, culminating in grand-scale emotional abuse. It’s a natural consequence of language users using their language in innovative ways. Semantic bleaching is a common process by which a word with a specific meaning comes to take on a more general meaning over time. Second, and related to my brother’s complaint, the term has undergone an extensive amount of semantic bleaching, and in a very short amount of time. The word has become shorthand for the behavior central to the movie’s plot. “Gaslight” has a roundabout, indirect etymology, one that co-opts the title of the 1944 movie, “Gaslight,” which tells the story of a woman whose husband slowly manipulates her into believing that she is losing her mind. Gaslighting is defined, in part, as “psychological manipulation of a person usually over an extended period of time that causes the victim to question the validity of their own thoughts, perception of reality,” according to Merriam-Webster. In this sense, it joins the ranks of only a handful of other English terms like “bucket list” and “catfish.” If someone were to encounter the word “gaslight” in a context in which its meaning isn’t fully transparent, they wouldn’t be able to use their inborn skills of semantic deduction to construct its meaning from the ground up, like they might with compositional compound words like “re-unlock.” ![]() There is nothing in the meaning of the word as we use it today that involves lights or gas. From my perspective as a semanticist - a linguist who studies meaning - the word has two properties that have been driving us to look it up.įirst, its meaning is non-compositional - meaning that the word is not composed of the meaning of its parts. Merriam-Webster has just announced that “gaslighting” is their word of the year for 2022, noting that searches for the word on its website have increased a whopping 1,740% from last year. He rolled his eyes, “That’s not what the word ‘gaslighting’ means.” “Stop gaslighting me about gaslighting!” I yelled back. “Stop gaslighting me,” I joked to my brother. ![]()
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