Merriam-Webster's Word of the Year 2023

A screenshot of NPR’s article about the 2023 Word of the Year

A couple of days ago Merriam-Webster announced that its Word of the Year for 2023 is "authentic", triumphing over trendy words like "rizz" and "deepfake." In their blog post on the word of the year selection, Merriam-Webster noted that "authentic" is rather difficult word to define, and tends to have different meanings for different people. It's certainly a word that feels important this year. This year has seen the growth of technologies such as ChatGPT and Dali, which raise questions about machine-generated creative output, especially when it relies on the often unwanted scraping and wholesale consumption of thousands of human-generated works without acknowledgment or compensation. It has also been a rough year for diversity and inclusion efforts in workplaces and schools; the previous pushes to have employees bring their "authentic" selves to the workplace have been hampered or reversed in many cases due to businesses caving into economic and vocal pressure from conservative groups and due to the passage of "anti-woke" legislation in many states and communities across the United States. Here's a look at how the word has been defined over the past three centuries, with definitions drawn from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries:

Samuel Johnson, in his 1755 dictionary, defined the winning word with just a single sense, noting that, in contrast to current usage, “it is never used of persons:”

AUTHE’NTICK. adj. [authenticus, Lat.] That which has every thing requisite to give it authority, as an authentick register. It is used in opposition to any thing by which authority is destroyed, as authentick, not counterfeit. It is never used of persons.

Thou art wont his great authentick will
Interpreter through highest heav'n to bring. Par. Lost, b. iii.

She joy'd th' authentick news to hear,
Of what she guess'd before, with jealous fear. Cowley.

But censure's to be understood
Th' authentick mark of the elect,
The publick stamp heav'n sets on all that's great and good. Swift.

Johnson's treatment of the word is starkly concise when compared to its treatment in The Century Dictionary (1891) over a century later. The word can now definitely be applied to persons, as evidenced by the 4th definition, at least in the capacity of stating that a person is trustworthy or speaks from authority.

authentic (â-then'tik), a. and n. [Early mod. E. also authentick, autentic, etc., < ME. autentike, auctentyke, < OF. autentique (mod. F. authentique, being changed, like the E. word, to suit the L. spelling) = Pg. authentico = Sp. auténtico = It. autentico, < LL. authenticus, < Gr. αὐθεντικός, warrented, authentic, original, < αὐθεντία, original authority, < αὐθέντης, contr. < αὐτοέντης (rare), one who does anything with his own hand, the real author of any act < αὐτός, self, + *ἔντης (found also in συνέντης, equiv. to συνεργός, a fellow-workman), of uncertain origin, perhaps < *σεντ-, < *ἀσαντ-, orig. form of Ionic ἐών, Attic ὤν (= L. ens, *sens), ppr. of εἶαι, be: see ens, be1. Cf. effendi, also ult. < Gr. αὐθέντης.] I. a. 1†. Having authority; possessing inherent authority; duly authorized; authoritative.

Men ought to fly all pedantisms, and not rashly to use all words that are met with in every English writer, whether authentic or not. E. Phillips.

2. Real; of genuine origin; being what it purports to be: opposed to pretended or imaginary, fictitious, counterfeit, apocryphal, or unauthorized: as, authentic documents.

As there is but one God, but one hope, but one anchorage for man — so also there can be but one authentic faith, but one derivation of truth, but one perfect revelation. De Quincey, Essenes, iii.

3. In law, executed with all due formalities; executed by the proper person and legally attested before the proper authorities: as, an authentic deed. — 4. Entitled to acceptance or belief; reliable; trustworthy; of established credit, credibility, or authority: as, an authentic tale, book, writer.

Origen, a most authentic author in this point. Brevint, Saul and Samuel, p. 77.

Of the manner in which the ruin of Nineveh was brought about we have nowhere any authentic record. Von Ranke, Univ. Hist. (trans.), p. 82.

That this mere dream is grown a stable truth
To-night's feast makes authentic. Browning, In a Balcony.

5†. Original; first-hand, as opposed to copied or transcribed. — 6. Own; proper; properly belonging to one's self. [Archaic.]

It were extreme partiality and injustice, the flat denial and overthrow of herself [Justice], to put her own authentic sword into the hand of an unjust and wicked man. Milton, Eikonoklastes, xxviii.

Men are ephemeral or evanescent, but whatever page the authentic soul of man has touched with her immortalizing finger, no matter how long ago, is still young and fair as it was to the world's gray fathers. Lowell, Oration, Harvard, Nov. 8, 1886.

7. In music, having an immediate relation to the key-note or tonic: in distinction from plagal, which has a corresponding relation to the fifth or dominant in the octave below the key-note.

Authentic act, in civil law, an act or deed performed before and attested by a notary or other proper magistrate. — Authentic cadence, same as perfect cadence (which see, under cadence). — Authentic melodies. See melody. — Authentic modes or tones. See mode. =Syn. 2 and 4. Authentic, Genuine, correct, trustworthy, reliable, credible. When applied to a written document or a book, authentic indicates that it is reliable as narrating real facts; genuine, that we have it as it left its author's hands: as, an authentic history; a genuine text. Authentic is thus equivalent to trustworthy, reliable; genuine, to unadulterated. The "Memoirs of a Cavalier" is a genuine work of Defoe's, for it was written by him, but it is not an authentic work, although so plausibly assuming the tone of real biography that it "deceived even the great Chatham into citing the volume as an authentic narrative" (Backus, Revision of Shaw's Eng. Lit., p. 250).

A genuine book is that which was written by the person whose name it bears; . . . an authentic book is that which relates matters of fact as they really happened. A book may be authentic without being genuine, and genuine without being authentic. Bp. Watson.

II.† n. [< LL. authenticum, ML. also authentica, the original (of a document), neut. or fem. of authenticus: see I.] 1. An authoritative or genuine document or book. — 2. An original, as opposed to a copy or transcript.

Authentics and transcripts. Fuller, Church Hist., I. 42.

The Authentics, in civil law, a Latin translation from the Greek of the novels or new constitutions of Justinian, made by an anonymous author. So called as an unabridged translation of the novels, to distinguish it from the epitome made by Julian.

Webster's Third New International Dictionary, in 1981, recorded 8 different senses of "authentic" (in contrast to the current online Webster, which has 5 meanings):

au·then·tic \ə'thentik, ȯ'-, -tēk\ adj [alter. (influenced by Gk authentikos) of earlier autentyke, fr. ME autentik, fr. MF autentique, fr. LL authenticus, fr. Gk authentikos, fr. authentēs, murderer, master, doer (fr. aut- + -hentēs one that accomplishes) + -ikos -ic; akin to Gk anyein, anein to accomplish, entea (pl.) armor, Skt sanoti he gains] 1 obs : possessing authority that is not usu. open to challenge : AUTHORITATIVE 2 : worthy of acceptance or belief by reason of conformity to fact and reality : not contradicted by evidence : TRUSTWORTHY, CREDIBLE, CONVINCING <an ~ book on medieval customs> <an ~ portrayal> 3 a : vested with due formalities and legally attested : legally valid <an ~ act> b obs : properly qualified : AUTHORIZED 4 a : not imaginary or specious : REAL, GENUINE <~ joy over her return> b : not copied : ORIGINAL <an ~ manuscript> <an ~ Chippendale chair> 5 of a church mode : ranging upwards from the keynote — distinguished from plagal 6 : of an origin that cannot be questioned : indisputably proceeding from a given source that is avowed or implied : not spurious <an ~ historical reference> 7 a : marked by conformity to widespread or long-continued tradition <an ~ English custom> b : marked by close conformity to an original : accurately and satisfyingly reproducing essential features <an ~ portrait> 8 biol : VALID

syn GENUINE, VERITABLE, BONA FIDE: AUTHENTIC stresses fidelity to actuality and fact, compatibility with a certain source or origin, accordance with usage or tradition, or complete sincerity without feigning or hypocrisy <he told his grandfather that he had been in combat with a giant, and frightened his poor mother ... with long, and by no means authentic, accounts of the battle — W. M. Thackeray> <an esoteric jargon which does not even have the authentic ring of American slang — Stanley Walker> <only the authentic Christian tradition has the answer to our present problems — Times Lit. Supp.> <an authentic passion for concrete detail, in the mind of the author himself — C. E. Montague> GENUINE may stress definite origin from a certain source <whose letter — genuine or counterfeited — had been so instrumental in hastening this outbreak — J. L. Motley> GENUINE chiefly emphasizes a real actual character as contrasted with a fraudulent, deceptive appearance <whether it is a genuine insight into the workings of his own mind or only a false explanation of them — C. D. Lewis> <sham motor bus companies which if genuine would have been very sensible and publicly useful investments — G. B. Shaw> <palming off paper imitations of all kinds of valuables on the simple-minded ghosts and gods, who take them in all good faith for the genuine articles — J. G. Frazer> GENUINE may also describe emotions or mental states really experienced and not feigned <that was no conventional expected shock that she had received. It was genuine unforeseen shock — Arnold Bennett> In "a genuine authentic Gilbert Stuart portrait of Washington", GENUINE emphasizes certainty of ascription to Stuart and AUTHENTIC emphasizes the close similarity between portrait and subject. VERITABLE indicates a true existence or actual identity <the ruffians were so utterly appalled, not only by the false powers of magic, but by veritable powers of majesty and eloquence — Charles Kingsley> It may indicate a very close similarity and stress the suitability of a metaphor <an old gray-haired lady, a veritable saint who had not been soured by her many deeds of charity — P. E. More> BONA FIDE, often commercial or legal in suggestion, stresses good faith and lack of intent to deceive or the avoidance of equivocal casuistry <bona fide residents who . . . maintained homes in no other places — Harper's>

The first couple of meanings in the 1981 definition approach but don't fully echo the current Webster's 2nd meaning, which specifically is applied to people: "true to one's own personality, spirit, or character."

It will be interesting to see how this word changes meaning and importance over the next few years, as machine learning algorithms weigh against human creations, as the younger generation pushes to have their diverse voices heard, and as society at large wrestles with whether authenticity matters and what being authentic really means for individuals, societies, brands, corporations, creative works, etc.

Japan Day 12: Flying Home

I managed to get everything into my (now very heavy) backpack. I had a few hours to kill, so I decided to kill my back a little and visit a bookstore before heading to the airport.

This is one of the contenders for “largest bookstore in Tokyo” but I think it pads itself out a bit too much with the cafés and such. Three two-story buildings joined by a walkway.

Art made from trash.

The Kabuki theater in Ginza. I didn’t get to sample any Kabuki or Rakugo on this trip, so that will have to be for next time.

Be careful of the panda.

This is a thing I’ve been doing during my trip. I haven’t been able to find them at all stations (particularly the large ones), but I collected quite a few.

I then bought a ticket for the Tokyo Monorail which goes from the Tokyo Tower area to Haneda Airport.

I had many options for getting to the airport: train, bus… I chose monorail.

The monorail gives one a bit of an elevated view.

Tokyo is a city of waterways and bridges.

The cranes sticking up remind me of the little garden eels I saw at the aquarium.

There appears to be an old-time boat behind the highway.

Arrival at the airport.

🎵Monorail!🎵

My phone has been alerting me non-stop the past few days that there is a change in my activity amounts. Don’t worry, phone. Soon I’ll return to previous trends.

Now I’m just chilling at the airport. It took no time to get through security. Not looking forward to the flight itself, and I have mixed feelings about leaving, but I know my feet would really appreciate a break.

My flight just got moved up ten minutes!

Thank you, Japan! 楽しかった!

Japan Day 11: Tokyo Tower and Shopping

Today was my last full day. I started off by going to Tokyo Tower. It’s maybe not as cool now that Tokyo Skytree exists (Tokyo Tower is 1092 feet tall; Tokyo Skytree is 2080 feet tall), but I only wanted to visit one, and Tokyo Tower is the tower that showed up in the anime and movies I grew up with, so that’s why I wanted to see it.

There are go-karts around the corner from my hotel. Tourists put on goofy onesies and drive these through Tokyo, including the busy Shibuya Crossing.

This is the Great Gate of Shiba, which appears in a number of famous Ukiyo-E woodblock prints.

A bust of Commodore Perry, who forced Japan out of isolation. This is an incredibly flattering (if rather gaunt) bust, considering how he looked in photographs and Japanese caricatures at the time.

This is the entry gate to the Zōjō-ji temple, a Pure Land Buddhism temple.

Making my way closer to Tokyo Tower.

Jizō statues at the temple cemetery.

This entire temple compound, except for the large bell, was completely destroyed in the World War 2 air raids on the city. It was rebuilt in 1974.

It’s starting to really make its size known.

Here’s some of those go-karts driving by Tokyo Tower.

They really push the message inside that Tokyo Tower is a super romantic, lovey-dovey place. Though there were also Blackpink and Digimon collaborations happening.

And now for a series of photos showing how enormous Tokyo is, and also how high up I am.

I only paid to go up to the main deck (490 feet up). For a lot more, one could pay for a tour of the Top Deck (819 feet up).

I’m not normally really scared of heights, but my legs were pretty jelly up here. I don’t think I could have handled the Top Deck.

Tokyo itself has 14 million people living in it; the metro area has almost 38 million residents.

Naturally there are the extra scary look-through-the-floor windows.

The buses look so small from up here.

A silhouette of myself as I sit and watch a movie on the history of Tokyo and the Tower.

I took the elevator up (which was fast and made my ears pop); I took the stairs down. There are approximately 600 stairs, and they count them down/up as you move flight by flight.

You get a good view of the construction of the tower via the stairs.

The guy who decided to build the tower really wanted to outdo the Eiffel Tower. The tower color is “international orange” for safety.

The tower opened to the public in 1958.

A view of the Zōjō-ji temple I passed on the way to the tower.

Finally reached the bottom; here’s a view looking straight up.

After I finished visiting Tokyo Tower, I proceeded on a whirlwind path of subway stations to hit some key tourism and shopping spots. First up, Shinjuku.

Tiny waterfall in a park bordering Tokyo Tower.

Shinjuku has a lot of entertainment places, like this castle-topped karaoke place.

Taito Station Game Arcade is a chain with locations throughout Japan, but this one is particularly big.

The real reason I stopped in Shinjuku - Godzilla!

Then I headed to Jimbōchō, Tokyo’s book district.

Books Sanseido. Sanseido publishes a lot of dictionaries; this is the main branch of their general bookstore.

Jimbōchō is Tokyo’s book district, “the world’s number one book city,” filled with new and used bookstores. It seems to sit next to a sports equipment district.

Even the subway stations at Jimbōchō are book-themed.

I then headed to Shibuya, home to Tokyo’s busiest pedestrian crossing. It’s also where one can find Tokyo’s Nintendo store.

Shibuya Scramble Crossing, “the world’s busiest pedestrian crossing” can have up to 3000 people transversing it at a time.

I guess when Inspector Zenigata isn’t chasing after Lupin (or maybe it’s what enables him to keep chasing), he’s advertising Suntory Draft Beer.

A rare quiet moment at Shibuya, as pedestrian crossing ceases and vehicle traffic is about to resume.

The traffic cops keep everything moving orderly.

Hachikō, the faithful dog that waited nine years for the return of his unbeknownst to him deceased owner.

A wall honoring Hachikō.

“No music, no life.”

Outback Steakhouse! It feels weird for an American “Australian” restaurant to exist in a country just a couple time zones off from the real Australia.

The entrance to Mandrake, full of all kinds of wonderful secondhand anime and manga merchandise, some incredibly old.

An Aliens-themed club in Shibuya.

This-a way to Mario!

It was hard picking something for my kid; I was incredibly overwhelmed with choice.

Another view of the Nintendo store.

MewTwo at the Shibuya Pokémon store.

I thought of my dad - across from the Nintendo store was a Minions-themed café.

There was a Jump store and a Capcom store on the same floor as the Nintendo store. The Capcom store had some really cool Monster Hunter x Pop Team Epic collaboration merchandise, but it was all sealed don’t-know-which-design sorts of things, so I didn’t get any.

My feet were finished at this point, so I headed back to my hotel.

A Maneki-neko art piece near my hotel.

Here’s today’s haul of goodies:

At Books Sanseido I bought “The Dictionary of Words that have Disappeared from the Sanseido Dictionary.”

In Jimbōchō I happened on a store displaying this Neverending Story movie promotional booklet.

Behind the scenes photo of the Morla puppet.

At Mandrake I got some anime art / info books for some of my favorite shows.

At the Nintendo store, I got my kiddo a bath bomb with a mystery Kirby figure inside. I got myself a washcloth with my favorite Mario baddie.

In the morning I get to play Tetris with everything, get packed up, and head towards the airport.