Petition to have a definition of the new English word "barack" read into the Congressional Record
Aktions Box
We the undersigned People of the United States, hereby Petition the Congress to read the following into the Congressional record to create an official citation of our definition of the new English word "barack". This is part of the project to have this word accepted by the Oxford Dictionary of the English Language and other dictionaries of record and establish a permanent negative definition of "barack" as a cautionary memorial to forever remind future generations that elections have consequences. We ask that this Petition be read into the Congressional Record in its entirety.
New words enter the English language every year. The process by which this occurs is through usage over time. According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, their editors study texts from many sources and create citations. When there are enough citations from many sources, a decision is made as to the definition of the new word. Reasons for non-inclusion in English language may be insufficient citations, citations from a single or limited source, lack of agreed-upon definition. The word barack has begun to appear as both a noun and verb in numerous places since early 2008. In early usage, barack was a compliment or was used in a positive way. Several examples of this appear at UrbanDictionary.com, the earliest of which was a Feb 2, 2008 posting by user cameron muthafin albin who defined barack as "obama", a man who you would be crazy not to elect". This sentiment was echoed by several other users at UrbanDictionary through a June 3, 2008 posting by The Peoples Champ suggesting the definition be revised to 1. to have little applicable experience
2. to say things that people like to hear but mean nothing
3. to say things that everyone would like done but has no realistic way of accomplishing them This is currently the #1 definition for barack on Urban Dictionary, just ahead of another user's suggestion that it is the sound someone makes when vomiting. The word "barack" has been used with various negative meanings in forums, web blogs, Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites, as well on talk radio and cable television. For example, the phrase "a crock of barack" has been used frequently on at least one nationally syndicated talk radio program since late 2009.
Below is the proposed definition of barack with which the undersigned agrees.
Main Entry: barack Pronunciation: \b?-'rak\ Function: verb Etymology: eponymous usage, a verbing of the given name of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama; African derivation, "Blessed"; a form of the Hebrew name Baruch Date: 2008 1 : to deceive, 2: to conceal intended meaning in communication, 3: to abandon persons or issues for self-gain, 4: to pander, 5: to obfuscate --common usage: "Don't barack me! Tell the Truth for a change!" Function2: noun 1 : untruthful information 2: excrement --common usage: "What a crock of barack!"
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