A, um, pleasant walk through mud season last March. Merriam-Webster has just added the term mud season to its dictionary. |
Dictionaries always try to keep up. On Wednesday, Merriam-Webster added 370 new words to its dictionary. Among the terms added is "mud season".
Us Vermonters are so, so familiar with that word combo, but perhaps much of the rest of the world is not. People would have to look it up. Now, they can.
For the record, Merriam-Webster defines "mud season" as "A time of year (such as early spring) that is characterized by excessively muddy ground."
That defines it pretty well. Of course Merriam-Webster is a "just the facts, ma'am" kind of organization, so they omit the often colorful descriptions we use when mud season leaves our cars mired in muck and our house tracked with so much dirt we could grow an indoor garden.
I'm happy to report that Merriam-Webster has added a few other words that are at least tangentially related to weather and climate.
In one case, I've never heard of the term before, but I love it.
Do this: Close your eyes and picture yourself stepping outside at dawn on a gorgeous May morning. The trees are just starting to explode with green, and the aroma of lilac, tulip, hyacinth and bleeding heart fills the air
The air also holds the sounds of a beautiful concert. All the birds are singing happily, and if you're not a curmudgeon who doesn't like being awakened early by all that chirping, the bird song fills you with joy.
That wonderful sound has a term and it was added to Merriam-Webster this week. It's called, appropriately enough "bird chorus." The official definition of this is, "The singing of wild birds that closely precedes and follows sunrise, especially in spring and summer."
Another weather related term added this year to Merriam-Webster has been around for decades, at least in meteorological circles. It's "atmospheric river."
Atmospheric rivers are those narrow channels of deep moisture that travel often thousands of miles over oceans and come ashore to produce heavy rain and flooding. Or at Merriam-Webster defines it: "A concentrated band of water vapor that flows through the atmosphere and that is a significant part of the global hydrologic cycle and an important source of regional precipitation."
There's one more relevant new Merriam-Webster listing. At least as it relates to this here weather/climate blog thingy. The word is "greenwash."
The definitions of this are (1): To make something such as a product, policy or practice appear to be more environmentally friendly or less environmentally damaging than it really is. (2): To mislead (someone) by means of greenwashing. greenwash noun : something (such as a claim or action) that is intended to make a product, policy, activity, etc. appear to be ore environmentally friendly or less environmentally damaging than it really is."
Since I like to make up words that make more sense than the English language, I'll have to think up some new weather related terms to propose to Merriam-Webster.
Any ideas, anyone?
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