
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Our guest this week is a lexicographer. That's someone who studies words and, in this case, edits dictionaries. Emily Brewster is a senior editor at Merriam-Webster and host of the podcast Word Matters.
Emily answers a question from 8-year-old Emma in Kentucky, who wants to know how words are added to the dictionary. But before we can answer that, we'll tackle 7-year-old Julia's question, "How are new words created?" Join us for an episode about how words are created, when they've reached a critical level of use to get their own dictionary entry, and when words are removed from the dictionary. Get ready for some word nerdery!
Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slide | Transcript
More Word Episodes:
Who Invented Words?
But Why Live: Words and Language
Why Are Some Words ‘Bad’?
"How do words get added to the dictionary?" - Emma, 8, Kentucky
Lexicographers like Emily Brewster read and listen a lot and pay attention to the new words that people are using. They collect these examples and determine how many instances there are of the word and what different kinds of sources are using the word.
Support But Why | Newsletter Sign-Up
By Vermont Public4.3
50175,017 ratings
Our guest this week is a lexicographer. That's someone who studies words and, in this case, edits dictionaries. Emily Brewster is a senior editor at Merriam-Webster and host of the podcast Word Matters.
Emily answers a question from 8-year-old Emma in Kentucky, who wants to know how words are added to the dictionary. But before we can answer that, we'll tackle 7-year-old Julia's question, "How are new words created?" Join us for an episode about how words are created, when they've reached a critical level of use to get their own dictionary entry, and when words are removed from the dictionary. Get ready for some word nerdery!
Download our learning guides: PDF | Google Slide | Transcript
More Word Episodes:
Who Invented Words?
But Why Live: Words and Language
Why Are Some Words ‘Bad’?
"How do words get added to the dictionary?" - Emma, 8, Kentucky
Lexicographers like Emily Brewster read and listen a lot and pay attention to the new words that people are using. They collect these examples and determine how many instances there are of the word and what different kinds of sources are using the word.
Support But Why | Newsletter Sign-Up

16 Listeners

13,612 Listeners

2,624 Listeners

16,741 Listeners

101 Listeners

60 Listeners

22 Listeners

36 Listeners

6,171 Listeners

11 Listeners

3 Listeners

394 Listeners

29,843 Listeners

15,891 Listeners

13,958 Listeners

1,613 Listeners

6,277 Listeners

18,042 Listeners

111 Listeners

1,224 Listeners

4,351 Listeners

2,039 Listeners

183 Listeners

1,575 Listeners