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Though it was used a lot in conversation, "occupy" did not prompt an unusual number of searches. "It's like the dog that doesn't bark. 'Occupy' or
'recession' or 'entitlement' are words you see pop up occasionally in the daily log of lookups, but not in the yearly log," Sokolowski said. "Occupy" still has a chance to grab a spot in the linguistic limelight, though, because it's being considered among the front-runners for the American Dialect Society's 2011 Word of the Year. That group's annual choice isn't driven by dictionary lookups, but is a word or phrase that members consider widely used, demonstrably new or popular and reflects the year's popular discourse
-- similar, in a sense, to Time's selection of Person of the Year. The magazine chose "the protester" as its person of the year for 2011. The American Dialect Society will announce its selection Jan. 6 after a vote at its annual convention in Portland, Ore., and the group's executive secretary, Allan Metcalf, says "occupy" is getting a lot of buzz. But so is "Tebow time," a concept that alludes to Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow's ability to rally late-game comebacks
-- and, in a broader sense, applied to any success or comeback at crunch time. "Maybe 'Tebow time' might win the Word of the Year in the crunch, but we have two weeks left to go, so who knows what other words might pop up," said Metcalf, who is also an English professor at MacMurray College in Jacksonville, Ill., and author of "OK: The Improbable Story of America's Greatest Word." Another outlet, the London-based Oxford English Dictionary, also named its 2011 word choice in November: "squeezed middle," a primarily term credited to British Labour Party leader Ed Miliband to describe the financial pinch felt by the middle class in Great Britain.
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