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    Home»Money»2025’s Words of the Year Say a Lot About an Internet We Can’t Quit
    Money

    2025’s Words of the Year Say a Lot About an Internet We Can’t Quit

    Press RoomBy Press RoomDecember 13, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Everyone is over 2025.

    Various platforms and dictionaries released their word of the year in December, and the choices widely reflect a sense of inescapable uncertainty, exhaustion, and skepticism of the tech world.

    “There’s no denying that 2025 has been a year defined by questions around who we truly are,” said Casper Grathwohl, President of Oxford Languages, “both online and offline.”

    From early-career job seekers stuck in unemployment, to social media content that never seems to advance the conversation, and workers struggling to keep up with AI, here is a list of words that dictionaries and culture-watchers say encapsulate the zeitgeist of 2025.

    Glassdoor: ‘Fatigue’

    Workers are tired, according to job search platform Glassdoor.

    The site that allows workers to post reviews of companies they have worked for or interviewed with coined “fatigue” as its word of the year, after the term saw a 41% spike in mentions across the platform in 2025.

    Glassdoor cited how job seekers are growing increasingly frustrated with endless applications that go nowhere, and how emotionally exhausted workers are with the rapid rise of AI.

    When Glassdoor asked professionals if they felt like the news cycle was draining their energy at work, 78% said yes. On top of that, job seekers are becoming increasingly frustrated as more “job huggers” hold onto their positions in a low-hire, low-fire job market.

    In an ironic admonition, Glassdoor wrote, “Yes, things could be better, but they could also be much worse.”

    Collins Dictionary: ‘Vibe coding’

    “Vibe coding,” a term coined by Andrej Karpathy, a prominent AI researcher, refers to the use of natural language prompts to instruct AI to write computer code instead of writing it from scratch.

    Collins said that its word of the year and its contenders mark a “further shift towards a tech-dominated world.”

    According to OpenAI’s annual enterprise report, code-related queries increased 36% for workers whose primary job is not engineering. Companies like Anthropic also said that its in-house AI, Claude, is now writing 90% of code for its teams.

    Oxford Dictionary: ‘Rage bait’

    If you ever feel so angry over online content that you feel compelled to repost it and give the comment section a piece of your mindyou may have encountered the Oxford Dictionary’s word of the year: “rage bait.”

    Oxford defined the word as “online content deliberately designed to elicit anger or outrage by being frustrating, provocative, or offensive, typically posted in order to increase traffic to or engagement.”

    According to Oxford’s data, the use of “rage bait” has tripled in 2025 compared to the year before, hinting at “a deeper shift in how we talk about attention — both how it is given and how it is sought after.”

    Cambridge Dictionary: ‘Parasocial’

    Many people seem unable to quit social media. And that could be largely due to “parasocial” relationships, which Cambridge Dictionary coined as word of the year.

    The term refers to one-sided “relationships that people form with celebrities, influencers, and AI chatbots,” Cambridge Dictionary wrote.

    For example, how fans often feel a deep connection to Taylor Swift’s lyrics about heartbreak, to the spontaneity of podcast hosts, and the “emotionally meaningful” and “in some cases troubling” connection between users and AI chatbots.

    Business Insider has documented various instances where people become emotionally dependent on an AI model or form long-term relationships with AI girlfriends. The release of AI companions by platforms like Grock, including a flirtatious anime girl, can increase the likelihood of such parasocial relationships.

    Macquarie Dictionary: ‘AI slop’

    The Australian English dictionary chose “AI slop” as its top word of the year, highlighting concern over “low-quality content created by generative AI, often containing errors, and not requested by the user.”

    The rise of AI-generated content has contributed to longer and more annoying memos at work that don’t actually push productivity forward, as well as tricked some news platforms into publishing inaccurate information, such as when the Chicago Sun-Times published an AI-generated summer reading list that matched real authors with books they never wrote.

    “While in recent years we’ve learnt to become search engineers to find meaningful information, we now need to become prompt engineers in order to wade through the AI slop,” said the Macquarie Dictionary Committee.

    Dictionary.com: ’67’

    Dictionary.com chose a numeral — the number 67 — as its word of the year, for the first time since the site started naming word of the year in 2010.

    The word, pronounced “six seven” instead of “sixty-seven,” experienced a dramatic rise in search volume since the summer of 2025 and increased more than sixfold since June, said Dictionary.com.

    Described as “meaningless, ubiquitous, and nonsensical,” Dictionary.com said it thinks this word means “so-so” or “maybe this, maybe that,” which makes some sense if you’re rating something a six or seven out of 10.

    “If you’re a member of Gen Alpha,” Dictionary.com added, “maybe you’re smirking at the thought of adults once again struggling to make sense of your notoriously slippery slang.”

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