‘Complicit’ Is The Word Of The Year In 2017, Dictionary.com Says

A screen shot provided by Dictionary.com shows the word “complicit,” on its website. Dictionary.com says that “complicit” is its word of the year for 2017, citing its new relevance in politics and social commentary.
A screen shot provided by Dictionary.com shows the word "complicit," on its website. Dictionary.com says that "complicit" is its word of the year for 2017, citing its new relevance in politics and social commentary. AP
A screen shot provided by Dictionary.com shows the word “complicit,” on its website. Dictionary.com says that “complicit” is its word of the year for 2017, citing its new relevance in politics and social commentary.
A screen shot provided by Dictionary.com shows the word "complicit," on its website. Dictionary.com says that "complicit" is its word of the year for 2017, citing its new relevance in politics and social commentary. AP

‘Complicit’ Is The Word Of The Year In 2017, Dictionary.com Says

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Dictionary.com has selected “complicit” as its word of the year for 2017, citing the term’s renewed relevance in America’s culture and politics — and noting that a refusal to be complicit has also been “a grounding force of 2017.”

The website defines “complicit” as “choosing to be involved in an illegal or questionable act, especially with others; having complicity.”

Interest in the word spiked several times in 2017, Dictionary.com says — most notably when Ivanka Trump said in April, “I don’t know what it means to be complicit.”

That quote came weeks after Saturday Night Live aired a segment in which Scarlett Johansson portrayed President Trump’s daughter in a skit to tout a luxury fragrance called Complicit. Its tag line: “The fragrance for the woman who could stop all this, but won’t.”

The term spiked a third time, Dictionary.com says, after Sen, Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., announced in October that he won’t seek re-election to Congress, citing a “flagrant disregard for truth or decency” in the Trump administration.

“It is time for our complicity and our accommodation of the unacceptable to end,” Flake told his fellow Republicans.

While those headline-grabbing mentions helped drive interest in and use of the term in the political arena, Dictionary.com says complicity also lurked behind many of the biggest stories of 2017. As examples, it listed humanity’s role in contributing to climate change, the normalizing of hate speech and supremacist groups, and the tacit enabling of sexual harassment.

Referring to the surge of support for women who endured harassment and rape that arose in the wake of accusations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein — and the new allegations that followed against other men — Dictionary.com says, “These powerful men could not have harmed so many people for so many years without the complicity of their associates and the established practice of ‘turning a blind eye’ to misconduct.”

The choice for the word of 2017 made us curious to see how much more prevalent the word has become in NPR’s coverage. A Google search for “complicit” on NPR.org returned 142 results from Jan. 1 through Nov. 27, 2017, compared to 75 results for the same period in 2016. A search of our audio archives found the word in 51 NPR transcripts, compared to 33 results in the same time period of 2016.

Choosing a word of the year is always an attempt to capture a sense of zeitgeist. In the case of complicity in 2017, the site states, “It’s a word that reminds us that even inaction is a type of action. The silent acceptance of wrongdoing is how we’ve gotten to this point.”

But the site also highlighted instances of action, and refusals to accept reprehensible or questionable conditions. It cited Sen. Flake’s stand as an example of that trend; it also noted the international Women’s March that took place in January, and the use of the hashtag #metoo to raise awareness of sexual assault and harassment.

Last year, Dictionary.com’s word of 2016 was xenophobia, citing a surge in interest from users both in the U.S. and around the world.

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.