Oh, how I would love to take credit for Oxford Languages’ announcement of “goblin mode” as its Word of the Year. Alas, my pointing people to the site last week to vote for either “goblin mode,” “metaverse” or “#IStandWith” likely had little to do with it. For those who did vote for it, thank you. You made writing my column this week much more fun.

Jennifer Schuessler wrote in The New York Times: “A year ago, the lexicographic grandees at Oxford Languages dutifully stuck out their arms and chose “vax” as the 2021 Word of the Year. But this year, the venerable publisher behind the Oxford English Dictionary has — like the rest of us, apparently — gone full goblin mode.”
Oxford opened the choice to a public vote for the first time this year (one could argue they went goblin mode by doing that since they usually pick the word themselves) from a shortlist created by lexicographers who base their lists on usage evidence to reflect “the ethos, mood, or preoccupations of the past twelve months, one that has potential as a term of lasting cultural significance.” In two weeks more than 340,000 people voted, and it wasn’t even close. UK website TimeOut noted: “The slang term was one of three potential choices selected by Oxford lexicographers, and won with a total of 318,956 votes—a whopping 93 percent of the overall vote. The runner-up was ‘metaverse’ with 14,484 votes, followed by ‘#IStandWith’ with 8,639 votes.”
When the result was announced on Twitter, there were a lot of people complaining that they’d never heard of it before (I couldn’t recall hearing it much either, but I’m a hermit, remember; however, I was very familiar with a predecessor, “beast mode,” mainly from a player both on “Survivor” and “Big Brother”), as well as the “but it’s a phrase!!!” rebuttals that seem to happen every time a dictionary names a phrase as its Word of the Year. As a word nerd, this bothers me not at all; “fake news,” “carbon footprint” and “dumpster fire” have all been somewhat recent phrasal Words of the Year. Those people might try looking at a dictionary sometime to see that phrases are included as well since sometimes a phrase has come to mean something different than its component parts mean separately. Besides, right there in the announcement, it says, “The Oxford Word of the Year is a word or expression …”
But what does it mean? According to Oxford, “‘Goblin mode’—a slang term, often used in the expressions ‘in goblin mode’ or ‘to go goblin mode’—is ‘a type of behaviour which is unapologetically self-indulgent, lazy, slovenly, or greedy, typically in a way that rejects social norms or expectations.’”
So … basically feral. That’s pretty much me in work-from-home mode. But unlike Boo the Warehouse Cat, I’m not cute enough to meow and get free food.

“Although first seen on Twitter in 2009, goblin mode went viral on social media in February 2022, quickly making its way into newspapers and magazines after being tweeted in a mocked-up headline. The term then rose in popularity over the months following as covid lockdown restrictions eased in many countries and people ventured out of their homes more regularly. Seemingly, it captured the prevailing mood of individuals who rejected the idea of returning to ‘normal life,’ or rebelled against the increasingly unattainable aesthetic standards and unsustainable lifestyles exhibited on social media.”

I’ve never had the money or time to achieve those standards, and as a longtime hermit, I resemble those remarks, except for “greedy” … unless chocolate or kisses from fur-nephew Charlie are involved. Of course, when I hear “goblin mode,” I don’t think so much in those terms, but more the trash- or plastic-eating goblins (sometimes gremlins) referenced on Twitter and elsewhere … like Charlie, who has probably never met a piece of plastic he didn’t think was right tasty.
But Charlie is an awfully cute goblin, and those of us who love him just try to keep the temptation down to a minimum. Not that he appreciates us taking away all those plastic pieces of happiness.
(There’s also a Twitter account for Animals Going Goblin Mode that’s worth a follow. If you want to imagine how Charlie reacts to plastic, there are an awful lot of critters there that will give you a good idea.)
Schuessler had a phone interview with Katherine Connor Martin, product director at Oxford Languages, who said, “New words catch on when they capture our imagination, or fill a hole with a word for a concept we need to express. What ‘goblin mode’ tells me is it resonated with the feeling that the pandemic is over, but we’re still grappling with it. Do we want to go back to the notions of respectability of the prepandemic world?”
Of the official Oxford definition, the dictionary’s blog noted: “The Oxford Corpus lists many vivid examples of goblin mode, including ‘Goblin mode is like when you wake up at 2 a.m. and shuffle into the kitchen wearing nothing but a long T-shirt to make a weird snack, like melted cheese on saltines,’ as quoted in The Guardian newspaper. More recently, an opinion piece in The Times stated that ‘too many of us … have gone goblin mode in response to a difficult year.’”
That’s … that’s pretty much every day for me … though I haven’t tried melted cheese on saltines (yet).

Metaverse, which refers to a virtual-reality environment in which people interact with others’ avatars as an extension or replacement for the Internet, and #IStandWith, referring to a social media hashtag to identify issue stances, didn’t stand a chance.
Martin told Schuessler the thinking behind asking the public to vote rather than having the lexicographers pick the Word of the Year again. “Having a group of people in Oxford choose it always felt weirdly undemocratic. And this year, when people are talking about democracy as a thing that might be under threat, it didn’t feel like the right approach.”
American linguist and lexicographer Ben Zimmer, at an event to announce the dictionary’s decision to open up its Word of the Year to public votes, said, “Goblin mode really does speak to the times and the zeitgeist, and it is certainly a 2022 expression. People are looking at social norms in new ways. It gives people the license to ditch social norms and embrace new ones.”
And who could blame us, really? Need I bring up the tyranny of pants? 😉
Casper Grathwohl, president of Oxford Languages, said, “We were hoping the public would enjoy being brought into the process, but this level of engagement with the campaign caught us totally by surprise. The strength of the response highlights how important our vocabulary is to understanding who we are and processing what’s happening to the world around us. Given the year we’ve just experienced, ‘Goblin mode’ resonates with all of us who are feeling a little overwhelmed at this point.
“It’s a relief to acknowledge that we’re not always the idealized, curated selves that we’re encouraged to present on our Instagram and TikTok feeds. This has been demonstrated by the dramatic rise of platforms like BeReal where users share images of their unedited selves, often capturing self-indulgent moments in goblin mode. People are embracing their inner goblin, and voters choosing ‘goblin mode’ as the Word of the Year tells us the concept is likely here to stay.”
Like I needed an excuse.



When goblins criticize each other for being too self-indulgent, they call it “going all Trump mode.”
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🤣🤣🤣
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As a fellow hermit who’d never heard of “goblin mode” at the time, I’d have voted for “metaverse.”
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I think all of them were sorta weird this year, but that’s what it came down to from the usage stats, so who am I to argue? Guess I need to branch out more. 😂
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If this is what is meant by “goblin mode”, maybe I shouldn’t ask what is “orc mode”. After reading Babbie’s comment, I should think that maybe “Trump Mode” probably Trumps all other modes whether or not you are playing a certain card game.
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I thought “goblin mode” meant gobblin’ up all of the food and not leaving anything for anyone else to eat.
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That would be an element of goblin mode: being greedy and ignoring social norms that say to leave enough for others.
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I still cannot decide whether or not I should pity or envy all of the people who were able to switch to goblin mode and work from home during the COVID-19 pandemic. No matter how bad it was, I was still expected to show up and report for work at my job almost every day of the week.
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You can meow all you want but you still won’t get any free food (not even Meow Mix) because There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch.
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Unless someone delivers you a box of Fancy Feast you didn’t order and you get to keep it for a certain semi-feral. 😏
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If Charlie keeps eating plastic, he may turn into a plastic cat. That might be a good plot for a horror movie.
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I don’t know how much he might have digested, but we usually stop him as soon as we hear the tell-tale plastic munch.
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Speaking of plastic, I remember overhearing a small child refer to a certain county in central Arkansas as “Plastic County” and this county was named after “Count Plastic” from Poland.
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If you are a musician and someone mentions “mode” or “modes”, that means something different to you from non-musicians.
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I wouldn’t have voted for “goblin mode” because a goblin isn’t a thing for me. It’s not something I think or talk about, so the name doesn’t convey much of an image or concept. Babbie’s “Trump mode” is interesting, but in a bad way. It conveys such a broad spectrum of bad behavior that I don’t think it has legs. Plus, I want to forget him (Trump, not you Babbie!)
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Cousin Earl is unforgettable for me. Hoping Trump will prove otherwise. 😂
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Boy, I’m all on board with that. The Trump disappearing part.
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Let me call my Good Friend Mister Potter to ask if he can chant the proper incantation in Latin to make Donald Trump disappear permanently.
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