##A Word for the American Century Sexy is an odd word, when you think about it. Just take a thing that has pretty universally liked -- that sells, as the saying goes -- and put a y at the end so it is an adjective. When we want to say someone is fast, we don't describe them as runny. We may call a person a "foodie," but doesn't describe how food-like they are. (Yeah, this could grow into an entire stand-up bit). Such are the things my wife gets to hear from me often first as I get myself more and more wound up in an idea. Next, it occurred to me that sexy was most likely a relatively recent coinage [1]. After all, we had many perfectly good words that worked to describe someone with sex appeal. We had voluptuous, beautiful, nubile, even sensual, flirtatious, coquettish. We didn't need sexy. Or did we? For one thing, it signals a kind of illiteracy -- and it would have done so more when the word first gained usage. It is cool to show your sexuality is not governed by old rules of convention and refined diction. Second, unlike many of the words we had before, the personality and intelligence of the object of attraction does not matter to sexiness. It is a word for staged images that are able to edit everything out except -- well, sexiness. The word is literally dehumanizing. Sexy is an ideal word for the world of mass media, including it being an extremely short word. It is easy to process no matter how low your verbal abilities are. The Oxford English Dictionary shows the word started in the 1920s and at first was a reference to the way people were reacting to mass media -- think something along the lines of "over-sexed," or "sex crazed," but it then settled into the use we all know and love. === [1] I predicted that a chart of usage, like google ngram, would show a late adoption and then a rapid upward growth. And that is the case. Although this now leaves the puzzle of the "sexy collapse" after 2004.