As Oxford Dictionary coins it the Word of the Year, the Internet is divided. Is it making being online a worse experience or ...
The Oxford Dictionary’s word of the year is “rage bait,” which the editors define as “online content deliberately designed to ...
Oxford boss Gary Rowett was frustrated by his side's loss to fellow strugglers Swansea after they had done so well to beat ...
LONDON — Oxford University Press has named “rage bait’’ as its word of the year, capturing the internet zeitgeist of 2025.
Last year, OUP named “brain rot” as the Oxford Word of the Year 2024, defined as “the supposed deterioration of a person’s ...
If your “nice shoes” are starting to look a little tired, this is a good excuse to finally upgrade to the real thing. The ...
Oxford University Press has officially named “rage bait” its 2025 Word of the Year. The organization defines this term as ...
The Cambridge Dictionary chose “Parasocial”, referring to the one-sided emotional bonds people form with celebrities, ...
According to Oxford, the term "rage bait" was first used online in 2002 in reference to the reaction of a driver who is ...
The term "has become shorthand for content designed to elicit anger by being frustrating, offensive or deliberately divisive ...
In 2024, Oxford's Word of the Year was brain rot, a phrase meant to capture the mental fatigue, dissatisfaction or dulling sensation people feel after endless scrolling through trivial or low-quality ...
You know that feeling when you read something online and it seems deliberately provocative, almost manufactured to create ...