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Yeehaw! Scrabble Dictionary adds 500 words

By Katherine Mansfield newsroom@heraldstandard.Com 5 min read
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Katherine Mansfield

The 鈥淥fficial Scrabble Players Dictionary,鈥 seventh edition, now includes Millennial and Gen Z terms like 鈥渂ae鈥 and 鈥渁tted,鈥 and vernacular words like 鈥渧ax.鈥 The addition of 500 words to the dictionary will allow players to open up the board and more easily get letters, particularly the letter 鈥淐,鈥 by playing 鈥済uac,鈥 off their dockets and onto the gameboard.

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Katherine Mansfield

Words like 鈥渋nspo,鈥 鈥渁tted鈥 and 鈥渒abocha鈥 are now Scrabble-official, allowing casual and competitive players alike to discard of hard-to-place letters and open up the board more easily. Hasbro and Merriam-Webster announced the expanded seventh edition of the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary last week.

The addition of 500 words to 鈥淭he Official Scrabble Players Dictionary鈥 seventh edition, released last week by Hasbro and Merriam-Webster, should make for some exciting and eyebrow-raising gameplay this holiday season.

The dictionary鈥檚 expansion 鈥 which includes 鈥渄ox,鈥 the search for and publication of identifying information, typically with malicious intent; and 鈥渄umpster,鈥 a trademark turned generic 鈥 has sparked convos amongst Scrabble enthusiasts nationwide. (Convo, short for 鈥渃onversation,鈥 was accepted as a 10-point word in the U.K. before its recent addition to the U.S. dictionary.)

鈥淎s our lexicon grows 鈥 (words) get incorporated into gameplay. It makes playing a little bit easier because it expands the possibility of what you can do with the letters on your rack,鈥 said Mike Tony, who founded the Uniontown Scrabble Club as part of a high school senior project 14 years ago. 鈥淚t opens up the game a little bit more. It makes it easier to put down certain letters that otherwise won鈥檛 be playable in certain situations.鈥

Letters like 鈥淐,鈥 Tony said, which is deceptively difficult to discard of, and 鈥淨,鈥 now more easily played, thanks to the addition of the term 鈥渜ueso.鈥

鈥淚 did print out all the ones that have Q in them, without being 鈥楺u.鈥 I didn鈥檛 know there were so many,鈥 laughed Johanna Rubino, a Monongahela resident who works at Donora Library, where she is a member of the bi-weekly Scrabble Club. 鈥淲e鈥檙e always looking for something when we get stuck with a Q.鈥

Rubino is excited the acceptable word list has been expanded so exponentially.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a good idea. Why have limitations?鈥 said Rubino. 鈥淚 think, for the group that I play with, the more words, the better. Any word that works is fine with me.鈥

The words that work are wide-ranging.

鈥淰ax,鈥 a remnant of the COVID-19 pandemic, is now an acceptable way to get rid of those pesky Xs, as is 鈥渇auxhawk,鈥 a hairstyle similar to the mohawk.

鈥淵eehaw,鈥 that antiquated Wild West word, has finally been inducted onto the Scrabble board, while new words like 鈥渟ubtweet,鈥 鈥渋nspo鈥 and 鈥渧ibing鈥 can also be found in the seventh edition of the 鈥淥fficial Scrabble Players Dictionary鈥 (Millennials, do you feel seen?).

Gen Z will delight in playing words like 鈥渟tan鈥 and 鈥渂ae,鈥 and foodies, rejoice, because 鈥渉orchata,鈥 鈥済uac,鈥 and 鈥渕arg,鈥 short for 鈥渕argarita,鈥 are now on the scoreboard menu.

In this latest edition of the dictionary, 鈥渋xnay鈥 has leveled up to verb status; now 鈥渋xnayed鈥 and 鈥渋xnaying鈥 are certain to score some serious points, and other verbs are also playable, including 鈥渁dulting鈥 and 鈥渁tted鈥 (the past tense of being addressed by someone on Twitter, according to Urban Dictionary).

鈥淓verything else in this country is shifting, so why not words?鈥 Rubino said.

While casual and at-home players can put those 500 new words to use over pie and coffee, tournament players are, for the moment, unaffected by the dictionary鈥檚 expansion.

鈥淚t seems like a simple game when you just play it at home. When you play in a tournament, it鈥檚 quite complicated, not only because of the huge number of words you need to know, but the rules are fairly complicated to prevent cheating,鈥 said Bob Hagerty, of Mt. Lebanon, who oversees the Mt. Lebanon Public Library North American Scrabble Players Association Club No. 655.

鈥淭he typical Scrabble player 鈥 some of them will buy a new dictionary,鈥 said Hagerty, or, 鈥渢hey鈥檒l just use whatever dictionary is close at hand. If you鈥檙e playing at the tournament level, you better have the latest list from NASPA. That could mean the difference between winning and losing.鈥

On NASPA鈥檚 Facebook page last week, tournament players discussed Hasbro and Merriam-Webster鈥檚 dictionary changes. John Chew, chief executive officer of NASPA and the Facebook page鈥檚 administrator, wrote online that the 2023 NASPA Word List would include those words added to the 鈥淥fficial Scrabble Players Dictionary,鈥 seventh edition.

Tournament Scrabble players pay closer attention to word additions and removals (within the last couple years, Scrabble dictionaries have done away with more than 200 derogatory words), but wordsmiths of all levels will certainly benefit from the dictionary鈥檚 expansion. The addition of words like 鈥淗ygge,鈥 a Danish term for all things cozy, and 鈥減ageview,鈥 one of several compound words that made this latest cut, illustrates the dictionary鈥檚 ability to keep up with our ever-evolving language.

鈥淚t鈥檚 always exciting, every four years, when new words come out, words that are starting to be used in the culture, and you can put them down on the board and get a lot of points,鈥 said Tony.

Hagerty agreed that the dictionary updates keep Scrabble modern.

鈥淔or a Scrabble player, it鈥檚 good to have these updates, because the language changes,鈥 said Hagerty. 鈥淵ou need to get rid of words that are no longer in dictionaries and adopt new words.鈥

Rubino said she hopes the addition of new words encourages a younger generation to gather, pull tiles and spell with friends.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a good learning tool. I wish more children would get into it. It would help with spelling, even reading,鈥 she said.

Tony is optimistic that Scrabble will keep on keepin鈥 on. The word game has entertained for generations, since its invention by architect Alfred Butts in 1931.

鈥淓verybody uses words. It鈥檚 a malleable game because however you want to play it, whether it鈥檚 ultra competitive in a tournament setting or just a relaxed, informal get-together, it鈥檚 鈥 just a lot of fun,鈥 said Tony. 鈥淭here鈥檚 strategy involved, and a little luck. We all like to shape words. I think the popularity of Wordle has proven that Scrabble, I think, is always going to endure as a game that brings people together.鈥

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