“Homer” has been chosen as the Cambridge Dictionary's 2022 word of the year, with editors crediting disgruntled <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/lifestyle/family/2022/07/15/a-wordle-board-game-is-coming-in-october/" target="_blank">Wordle</a> players whose winning streak was ended by the unfamiliar <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/american/" target="_blank">American</a> English term. The word is an informal American English term for a home run in <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/baseball/" target="_blank">baseball</a> and was searched for nearly 75,000 times during the first week of May when it was an answer in the online five-letter word puzzle. It was the dictionary’s highest-spiking word of the year, and editors said five-letter <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/2022/04/19/kamala-harris-has-48-game-wordle-streak-and-describes-the-puzzle-as-her-brain-cleanser/" target="_blank">Wordle</a> answers dominated searches as the game became a global phenomenon. The vast majority of searches for homer — 95 per cent — were from outside North America as frustrated Wordle players turned to the Cambridge Dictionary to learn what it meant. Speakers of British English used words such as “outraged” and “furious” to complain on <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/social-media/" target="_blank">social media</a> about the choice of the word as the Wordle answer for May 5. The American spelling of “humor” caused the second highest spike in 2022. In third place was “caulk”, a word more familiar in American English than in British English, meaning to fill the spaces around the edge of something, for example a bath or window frame, with a special substance. Americans, in turn, grumbled about “bloke”, which appeared on Wordle on July 25. “Wordle’s words, and the public’s reactions to them, illustrate how English speakers continue to be divided over differences between English language varieties, even when they’re playing a globally popular new word game that has brought people together online for friendly competition about language,” said Wendalyn Nichols, Cambridge Dictionary's publishing manager. “The differences between British and American English are always of interest not just to learners of English but to English speakers globally, and word games are also perennially entertaining. “We’ve seen those two phenomena converge in the public conversations about Wordle, and the way five-letter words have simply taken over the lookups on the Cambridge Dictionary website.” Searches for Wordle’s five-letter words on the Cambridge Dictionary site squeezed out other high-interest words that reflected current affairs. These included “oligarch”, likely triggered by new international sanctions and geopolitical shifts amid Russian President <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/vladimir-putin/" target="_blank">Vladimir Putin’s</a> war in <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/ukraine/" target="_blank">Ukraine</a>, and “vulnerable”, which may have been prompted by <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/inflation/" target="_blank">inflation</a> and the cost-of-living crisis that hit many nations worldwide. “Ableist” spiked during the controversy over the use of an ableist slur in lyrics to the pop song <i>Grrrls</i> by Lizzo. Additions to the Cambridge Dictionary this year have included “shrinkflation”, defined as the situation when the price of a product stays the same but its size gets smaller. Lexicographers are considering several other new words for inclusion, with “digital amnesia” — defined as a condition in which people become less able to remember things because they are used to looking everything up on the internet — among those on the list.