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Scrabble Scramble

By Vera H-C Chan
Mon, July 07, 2008, 3:31 pm PDT

Philologists, rejoice. Wordsmiths worked themselves up in a lexical lather after Merriam-Webster recently added more than 100 new words. Now their wordly obsessions can reach a new level with Scrabble's new online game.

Or will they? Hold your Qs and Js... isn't there already a fabulous, albeit contentious, version made popular by Facebook? After all, Scrabulous probably spurred the leap in "scrabble dictionary" searches, about double what they were compared to this same time last year.

Some observers thinks the official Scrabble version is too North American-centric and comes too late. Will words fail them, or could this version drag high-stakes, tile-loving spellers into social networking? Either way, wordiness wins.

Filed under: Words, Wordplay, Games, Spelling, Dictionaries

How Long is Indefinitely?

By Erik Gunther
Mon, August 27, 2007, 11:15 am PDT
Indefinite, adjective: "A. not definite: typically designating an unidentified, generic, or unfamiliar person or thing.
B. not precise : VAGUE.
C. Having no exact limits"
Merriam-Webster

When NFL commissioner Roger Goodell handed down an indefinite suspension to disgraced quarterback Michael Vick, some searchers were baffled. They weren't confused about the reason for Vick's banishment—it was Goodell's choice words that sent fans scrambling for the Search box.

Searches on "define indefinitely" topped our definition search chart as folks tried to pin down a day when Vick could return to the league. However, it's difficult to get your arms around something that has "no exact limits." The commish deliberately left his wording vague just in case any new information in the sordid Vick case comes to light.

Filed under: NFL, Words, Wordplay

That's Hot!

By Erik Gunther
Fri, January 20, 2006, 5:00 pm PST
Carmen Electra
Carmen Electra

What is hot, exactly? We toss the word around so liberally here at the Buzz, it risks losing all meaning. In fact, the way we incessantly babble "that's hot," we might be mistaken for dimwitted devotees of The Simple Life. Airheaded heiresses aside, a topic's "hotness" is directly correlated to its buzz-worthiness, and recently we noticed a different, more direct heat seeping into our data. So we decided to face the fire and dive headlong into "hot" searches. We wanted to investigate the people who had the word "hot" appended to their name in the Search box. Sadly, "wilford brimley hot" didn't make the cut, but here are the hottest of the hot according to the Search thermostat...

  1. Carmen Electra Hot
  2. Stacy Keibler Hot
  3. Emma Watson Hot
  4. Pamela Anderson Hot
  5. Jessica Alba Hot
  6. Lita Hot
  7. Jennifer Lopez Hot
  8. Jessica Simpson Hot
  9. Brooke Burke Hot
  10. Jennifer Love Hewitt Hot
  1. Hilary Duff Hot
  2. Lindsay Lohan Hot
  3. Patricia Heaton Hot
  4. Sania Mirza Hot
  5. Traci Bingham Hot
  6. Shakeela Hot
  7. Maria Sharapova Hot
  8. Olsen Twins Hot
  9. Mallika Sherawat Hot
  10. Alyssa Milano Hot

Filed under: Actors, Celebrities, Wordplay, So Hott

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top leaders

Rank Subject Move  Score 
1Danica Patrick+194 207 
2Fort Hood+185 185 
3Angelina Jolie+114 164 
4Rihanna+39 157 
5New York Yankees+54 154 
6Alicia Keys+139 153 
7Twitter+1 153 
8NFL+6 138 

what's the buzz?

A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.


For more detailed information, visit our FAQ.