These 10 words have been 'banished' for 2023 - and there are some you use

Lake Superior State University has chosen the ten words it found were most "misused, overused, and useless" in 2022 and forbidden people from using them at all for the next 12 months.

Close up shot of young man with taped mouth with shhh text on it. Pic: Istock by Getty
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Moving forward, irregardless of how you may feel about it, a university in the US has added a number of words and phrases to a "banished" list.

Every year since 1976, Lake Superior State University has its compilation of choices that are to be banned for the entire incoming year.

More than 1,000 everyday terms have made it on to the roll of shame - some more than once.

And this year, sees GOAT (the acronym for Greatest Of All Time), top the poll.

Also included were...
Inflection point
Gaslighting
Quiet quitting
Moving forward
Amazing
Absolutely
Does that make sense?
Irregardless
It is what it is

For its 2023 list, Lake Superior State University judges reviewed more than 1,500 submissions before coming up with their top ten.

A university spokesperson said, of the number one nominee, GOAT: "The many nominators didn't have to be physicists or grammarians to determine the literal impossibility and technical vagueness of this wannabe superlative.

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"Yet it's bestowed on everyone from Olympic gold medallists to Jeopardy champions."

Lake Superior University banned word list. Pic: Lake Superior University

Words and terms banned in 2022 included "no worries", "you're on mute," and "wait, what?"

Others over the years have included "vis-a-vis", "information superhighway", "I'm like," and, for a nation some might say not as 'skilled' at football punditry as the UK, bizarrely also outlawed was "giving 110 percent".

Perhaps less surprising in 1983, one of the forbidden words was "Reaganomics" - the much overused term at the time, for the economic policies promoted by US President Ronald Reagan.

President Clinton poses with Monica Lewinsky in a 17 November, 1995 photo
Image: President Clinton and Monica Lewinsky

Also predictable, was the ban on "Y2K" in 1999, followed hot-on-the-heels by "millennium" in 2000.

And almost certainly to the relief of one William Jefferson Clinton, in 1999 "Monica Lewinsky" was added to the don't-say list.

The university has even copyrighted the concept of its Banished Words List to "uphold, protect, and support excellence in language by encouraging avoidance of words and terms that are overworked, redundant, oxymoronic, clichéd, illogical, nonsensical-and otherwise ineffective, baffling, or irritating".

Enough said.