Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Ahh 2020. A year that most of us would prefer to forget.

  • But it did bring us some new vocabulary.

  • In the next seven minutes, we bring you a countdown

  • of the BBC Learning English top ten words

  • of 2020.

  • So of course this was the year that we all turned to video conferencing to stay in touch

  • [Can you unmute yourself please?] as the world went into lockdown

  • [press, press the mute button]

  • but a lot of us forgot to turn our sound on

  • [mute, you're on mute] and so this

  • word came into our lives:

  • Let's hope that by the end of the year we'll all know where that mute button is and when

  • to use it.

  • [you're on mute, Sam. Can you unmute your microphone? Sure, hello. Can you

  • hear me now? Yeah, we can hear you now.]

  • This year's coronavirus outbreak means we've all had to get used to events being cancelled.

  • But this year the verb 'cancel' has also been used to describe how people with unpopular

  • views are 'removed' from public life.

  • Here's Feifei to explain:

  • 'Cancelling' someone means to stop supporting or following someone, particularly

  • a public figure, because of something they have said or done.

  • It's also known as a 'cancel culture'.

  • If you're watching this far, you haven't cancelled us yet

  • and we're happy about that.

  • This one's a two-word phrase that many of us used for the very first time in 2020 as

  • Coronavirus brought people together at the same time as it drove us apart.

  • Whatever method we used to stay in touch with our friends, neighbours and colleagues,

  • we started ending our conversations with the words 'stay safe'

  • because we wanted them to do just that.

  • [Ok, stay safe. Stay safe! Stay safe and join us next time. Bye.]

  • Despite everything that happened in 2020, the global plastic mountain kept getting higher

  • and higher and we kept seeing and saying more and more phrases with the word 'plastic'

  • as we kept talking about ways of getting to grips with the plastic problem.

  • Let's hope it's not too long before we're living in a post-plastic world.

  • Oh! Did I just make a word up?

  • 2 metres, one metre, one metre pluswe've all had to learn not to get too close to our

  • friends, neighbours, waiters, shop assistants, delivery drivers, everyone really!

  • And we brought you some expressions to make sure we stick to the rules:

  • Could you just stand back a bit, please?

  • Shall we do the social distancing thing?

  • Not too close! Are we far enough apart?

  • No, that's not a spelling mistake. As coronavirus spread from country to country,

  • leading the World Health Organisation to declare a pandemic on the 11th of March 2020,

  • Some people began to think it's all a big conspiracy.

  • Not everybody agrees, but either way, we've certainly seen a lot of this word this year.

  • You didn't think we could get through this list without talking about

  • the US elections, did you?

  • There were so many words we could have chosen

  • but one word that Donald Trump kept using

  • before, during and after the election was 'fraud'.

  • Trump and his supporters claimed that there was widespread fraud during the

  • US elections; others said there was little, if any, evidence for this.

  • As the arguing continues, we've got a feeling we'll still be talking about

  • these elections for quite a few years to come.

  • Royal watchers were stunned on the eighth of January 2020 when Prince Harry and Meghan

  • Markle announced their intention to leave the UK and go off to do their own thing across

  • the Atlantic.

  • And in a clever play on the portmanteau word 'Brexit',

  • witty commentators quickly came up the the even wittier 'Megxit' and we've

  • been using it ever since.

  • We wish you well Harry and Megan, whatever you're doing.

  • We could have gone for plain old 'coronavirus' for this one, but we're all about the language

  • here and any word that is made up from three words

  • and a number has to be up there on our list.

  • The three words? The 'CO' from 'corona', the 'VI' from 'virus', the 'D'

  • from 'disease' and the number 19 from the year 2019 when the virus first appeared

  • gave us a word that we just couldn't stop using in 2020.

  • There's just one more word to go.

  • We've had a great year bringing you all the vocabulary

  • you need to talk about the world and everything that's happened in it in 2020:

  • the good things as well as the not-so-good things.

  • We'd love to bring you more words but all we can do right now

  • is to tell you to visit us on BBC Learning English

  • to find great language learning content throughout 2021, whatever it has in store for us.

  • And now, the BBC Learning English word of the year 2020 is….

  • Lockdown.

  • As we all stocked up on essentials, put on our loungewear and got used to workout

  • videos, zoom calls and weight gain, the one word that summed up our pain, worry and fears

  • as well as our hope, kindness and patience was 'lockdown' –

  • a noun made from the 2 words 'lock' and 'down'

  • that summarised the changes to the world's way of life for most -

  • and for many people - all of 2020.

  • So that's it. We hope that you've enjoyed

  • this look back at some of the English wordsold and newthat we've used, perhaps

  • more than we thought we would, in 2020.

  • We're sure there will be many more to come in 2021

  • - and we'll be right here to explore them with you. Goodbye.

Ahh 2020. A year that most of us would prefer to forget.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it