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‘Selfie’ named 2013’s word of the year

LONDON — Michelle Obama shared one with her ‘‘first dog’’ Bo, Hillary Clinton tweeted one with her daughter, Chelsea. Now ‘‘selfie’’ — the smartphone self-portrait — has been declared word of the year for 2013, according to Britain’s Oxford University Press.

The publisher of the Oxford dictionaries said Tuesday that ‘‘selfie’’ saw a huge jump in usage in the past year, bursting from the confines of Instagram and Twitter to become mainstream shorthand for any self-taken photograph.

Researchers behind the renowned dictionaries pick a prominent word or expression in the English language each year that best reflects the mood of the times. Previous words of the year have included ‘‘unfriend’’ in 2009, ‘‘credit crunch’’ in 2008, ‘‘carbon footprint’’ in 2007 and ‘‘Sudoku’’ in 2005.

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Judy Pearsall, the editorial director for Oxford Dictionaries, said ‘‘selfie’’ appeared to have been first used in 2002 on an Australian online forum, and the hashtag #selfie appeared on the photo-sharing website Flickr in 2004.

‘‘But usage wasn’t widespread until around 2012, when ‘selfie’ was being used commonly in mainstream media,’’ she said.

Australian English sometimes uses the suffix ‘‘-ie’’ — such as barbie for barbeque and tinnie for a can of beer — which helps to explain where ‘‘selfie’’ may have come from, Pearsall added.

Oxford usually assigns a separate word of the year to the United States and to Britain, but it said ‘‘selfie’’ captured the imagination on both sides of the Atlantic this year.

The term beat other buzzwords including ‘‘twerk,’’ the sexually provocative dance move that got a huge boost in usage thanks to an attention-grabbing performance by pop star Miley Cyrus; ‘‘showrooming,’’ the practice of visiting a shop to look at a product before buying it online at a lower price; and ‘‘Bitcoin,’’ the digital currency that gained widespread media attention.

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Also making the shortlist was ‘‘binge-watch,’’ a verb that describes watching many episodes of a TV show in rapid succession.

Associated Press