American Dialect Society


The American Dialect Society, founded in 1889, is a learned society "dedicated to the study of the English language in North America, and of other languages, or dialects of other languages, influencing it or influenced by it." The Society publishes the academic journal American Speech.
Since its foundation, dialectologists in English-speaking North America have affiliated themselves with the American Dialect Society, an association which in its first constitution defined its objective as "the investigation of the spoken English of the United States and Canada". Over the years, its objective has remained essentially the same, only expanded to encompass "the English language in North America, together with other languages or dialects of other languages influencing it or influenced by it".

History

The organization was founded as part of an effort to create a comprehensive American dialect dictionary, a near century-long undertaking that culminated in the publication of the Dictionary of American Regional English. In 1889, when Joseph Wright began editing the English Dialect Dictionary, a group of American philologists founded the American Dialect Society with the ultimate purpose of producing a similar work for the United States.
Members of the Society began to collect material, much of which was published in the Society's journal Dialect Notes, but little was done toward compiling a dictionary recording nationwide usage until Frederic G. Cassidy was appointed Chief Editor in 1963. The first volume of the Dictionary of American Regional English, covering the letters A-C, was published in 1985. The other major project of the Society is the Linguistic Atlas of the United States and Canada.

Membership

The Society has never had more than a few hundred active members. With so few scholars advancing the enterprise, the developments in the field came slowly. Members of the organization include "linguists, lexicographers, etymologists, grammarians, historians, researchers, writers, authors, editors, professors, university students, and independent scholars." Its activities include a mailing list, which deals chiefly with American English but also carries some discussion of other issues of linguistic interest.

Word of the Year

Since 1991, the American Dialect Society has designated one or more words or terms to be the word of the year. The New York Times stated that the American Dialect Society "probably started" the "word-of-the-year ritual". However, the "Gesellschaft für deutsche Sprache" has announced a word of the year since 1977.
Special votes that they've made:
The society also selects words in other categories that vary from year to year, such as "most original" or "most unnecessary" and "most likely to succeed".
A number of words chosen by the ADS are also on the lists of Merriam-Webster's Words of the Year.

List of Words of the Year

YearWordNotes
1990bushlips
1991mother of all-
1992Not!
1993information superhighway
1994Tie: cyber and morph
1995Tie: World Wide Web and '.
1996mom.
1997millennium bug
1998e-.
1999Y2K
2000chad.
20019-11, 9/11 or September 11
2002weapons of mass destruction or WMD
2003metrosexual
2004red/blue/purple states.
2005truthinesspopularized on '.
2006 to be plutoed, to pluto.
2007subprime.
2008bailout
2009tweet
2010app
2011occupy
2012#hashtag
2013because
2014#blacklivesmatter
2015they
2016dumpster firean exceedingly disastrous or chaotic situation
2017fake newsdefined by the ADS in two ways: “disinformation or falsehoods presented as real news” and “actual news that is claimed to be untrue”
2018tender-age shelter
2019 pronouns"Recognized for its use as an introduction for sharing one’s set of personal pronouns."