
The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg ‘Aquavit,’ ‘Zebroid,’ and ‘Haole’ | Interview: Stefan Fatsis
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Feb 18, 2026 Stefan Fatsis, author and Scrabble legend who embedded at Merriam-Webster, discusses modern lexicography. He talks about how dictionaries shifted from prescriptive to descriptive. They cover handling politically charged words, why dictionaries lag language, threats from digitization to paper archives, and how Scrabble and wordlists shape word use.
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Lexicography's Training Shrank
- Modern lexicography shifted from formal training to smaller, ad-hoc onboarding due to digital and business changes.
- Stefan Fatsis found Merriam-Webster's defining process became leaner and less ritualized in the 2010s.
From Prescribing To Describing
- Dictionaries have moved from prescribing proper usage to describing how people actually use language.
- Merriam-Webster emphasizes usage notes to explain contested uses rather than simply labeling them wrong.
Consult Usage Notes Before Using Words
- Read usage notes to understand contested words and their histories before using them.
- Use those notes to decide whether a usage is widely accepted or still stigmatized.






