Originally published Monday, January 2, 2006 at 12:00 AM
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"Hunker down" all you "persons of interest," its 2006's list of banned words
No up-or-down vote necessary: Everyone from persons of interest to first-time callers will agree that 2005 offered more than its share of...
The Associated Press
DETROIT — No up-or-down vote necessary: Everyone from persons of interest to first-time callers will agree that 2005 offered more than its share of irritating words and phrases.
Lake Superior State University on Saturday released its 2006 "List of Words and Phrases Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-Use, Over-Use and General Uselessness." But please, don't call it "breaking news."
That and 16 other linguistic nuisances were selected by a university committee from among almost 2,000 nominations. The small academic outpost in the Upper Peninsula community of Sault Ste. Marie has been compiling the list since 1976 to attract publicity — certainly not to offer anyone "talking points."
The committee also targeted such gems as "hunker down," which it noted is used by media "in reports about everything from politics to hurricanes."
Also frequently heard on the news is "person of interest," a favorite of law-enforcement agencies. Such a person is "seldom encountered at cocktail parties," the list's authors lamented.
From the field of education comes "community of learners."
"Not to be confused with 'school,' " one critic wrote.
Banished words![]()
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Lake Superior State University's 2006 list of words and phrases banished "for mis-use, over-use and general uselessness":
• Surreal
• Hunker down
• Person of interest
• Community of learners
• Up-or-down vote
• Breaking news
• Designer breed
• FEMA
• First-time caller
• Pass the savings on to you!
• 97 percent fat-free
• An accident that didn't have to happen
• Junk science
• Git-r-done
• Dawg
• Talking points
• Holiday tree
Politics offered plenty of fodder. The committee cited "up-or-down vote," a phrase uttered often in 2005 by Republicans eager to see President Bush's judicial nominees move through the Senate without the threat of a Democratic filibuster.
The committee also banished "FEMA," the acronym for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, whose operations after Hurricane Katrina were widely criticized as ineffective.
"If they don't do anything, we don't need their acronym," wrote Josh Hamilton of Tucson, Ariz., in nominating the acronym.
Many of the phrases banned this year are not new but simply got under enough people's skin to finally deserve the dubious honor.
Miguel McCormick, of Orlando, Fla., was fed up with "first-time caller," a designation heard on talk radio.
"I am serious in asking: Who in any universe gives a care?" he asked.
The school has banned nearly 800 words and phrases over the years, including "metrosexual" (2004), "chad" (2001), "baby boomers" (1989) and "détente" (1976).
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