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January 1, 2010

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Uni kills phrase 'shovel ready'

THE phrase "shovel ready," incessantly invoked by the Obama administration last year as a way to sell its US$787 billion federal stimulus bill, died yesterday.

The official cause of death was overuse, according to Lake Superior State University, which announced the phrase's demise in its annual List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness, released yesterday.

"Shovel ready" dug its own grave by forcing its way into speeches and out of the mouths of the president and too many other politicians.

"Stick a shovel in it. It's done," seethed Joe Grimm of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in his nomination to the university's Word Banishment Committee. Grimm is a visiting journalist at Michigan State University and a former recruiter and editor at the Detroit Free Press.

The exact age of the phrase isn't known, but it had been a quiet favorite of economic development types for at least a decade - a fondness that led a utility company in upstate New York to secure the shovelready.com Website in the late 1990s.

"Shovel ready" became a call for the White House during the past year as shorthand for the kind of taxpayer-funded work projects that had been through the design and permitting process and were ready to launch.

Still, its vigor waned from verbal wear and tear in recent months. It didn't help that some of the projects weren't quite ready for a shovel, the literal or figurative kind.

"When something dies, it, too, is 'shovel ready' for burial and so I get confused about the meaning," wrote Jerry Redington of Keosauqua, Iowa. "I would suggest that we just say that the project is ready to implement."

The phrase was joined in dialectical death on the school's 35th banned words list by, among others, "transparent/transparency," "czar," "sexting," "tweet," "teachable moment" and "app." App - as in the iPhone's "there's an app for that" ad - was preceded in death by "killer app," which was banished in 2002.

Many other terms related to the federal stimulus have been thrown into the semantic scrap heap for 2010, including "stimulus," "toxic assets" and "too big to fail."





 

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