allyship
Image credit: Pixabay

The English-language educational resource Dictionary.com has named allyship as 2021’s ‘Word of the Year’.

This is the first time in Dictionary.com’s history that it has chosen a new word for its Word of the Year. Dictionary.com defines Allyship as “the status or role of a person who advocates and actively works for the inclusion of a marginalised or politicised group in all areas of society; not as a member of that group but in solidarity with its struggle and point of view and under its leadership.”

The addition of the word to the dictionary in 2021, as well as the decision to elevate it as the top word for the year, reflects the increased prominence of the word; especially in the world of work and education. Allyship combines the noun ally, “a person who advocates for or supports a marginalised or politicised group but is not a member of the group,” and –ship, suffix denoting “status, condition.”

SUPPORTING MARGINALISED COMMUNITIES

In selecting the Word of the Year, Dictionary.com pointed to ways in which the term allyship is increasingly being extended to contexts of support outside of racial, gender and sexual identity; such as disability and economic status. From workplaces to classrooms, the word was commonplace in important discussions involving other defining terms of 2021, including DE&Icritical race theory and vaccines. It was also a theme among the support of healthcare workers and teachers; which further inspired Dictionary.com’s own efforts in expanding from a source of definitions and synonyms to a leading educational resource aimed at supporting teachers and educators across the country.  

In fact, Dictionary.com found evidence for this sense of allyship as early as the 1940s in an article by Albert W Hamilton on “allies on the front of racial justice” for Black people. Allyship is first attested around 1850 in a more general sense of “the relationship or status of persons, groups, or nations associating and cooperating with one another for a common cause,” but use of the word in contexts of social justice, which gained momentum in the 1990s and has steeply risen since 2020, noted Dictionary.com.

companies plan to increase diversity spend with diverse suppliers.
Dictionary.com defines Allyship as “the status or role of a person who advocates and actively works for the inclusion of a marginalised or politicised group in all areas of society; not as a member of that group but in solidarity with its struggle and point of view and under its leadership.” Image credit: Pexels

BECAUSE POWERFUL WORDS MAKE A DIFFERENCE

The decision to crown ‘allyship’ Word of the Year selection was based on the site’s search trends across Dictionary.com and Thesaurus.com this year. The word ally itself landed within the top 850 of the many thousands of search terms that led people to Dictionary.com over the last 12 month. According to data, the word that most commonly precedes allyship is performative; indicating the conversation about the term is concerned with the authenticity of advocacy seen this past year. Additionally, the top related search for allyship in 2021 was for its definition: what is allyship; underscoring the company’s timeliness and relevance for adding the word to the database this year. 

“From the ongoing impacts of the pandemic to the ways we continue to grapple with polarisation, allyship acted as a prism for the defining events of 2021. These events were notable not only in their own right, of course, but also because of the ways we largely reacted to and discussed them through the lens of who gets a voice, who deserves empathy, and who and what is valued. This was a lens of allyship”, stated John Kelly, Associate Director of Content & Education at Dictionary.com. “Words make a real difference in our lives. As our 2021 Word of the Year, allyship stands out for its role in a path of the challenges we continue to grapple with from 2020.”

myGwork, the professional LGBTQ+ networking and recruitment platform, will be exploring the power of allyship on 15 December 2021. Click here to find out more.

Sign up for our newsletter