Close Menu
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
What's On

Russian air barrage on Kyiv prompts Polish jet scramble – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

Ukraine anti-corruption agency blocked during probe into MPs bribery scheme – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

UK trade unions urge Labour to revisit EU customs union – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

9 arrested and €8 million seized in illicit Hamas financing probe in Italy

December 27, 2025

Video. Latest news bulletin | December 27th, 2025 – Midday

December 27, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian Europe
Newsletter
  • Home
  • Europe
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Environment
  • Culture
  • Press Release
  • Trending
Daily Guardian EuropeDaily Guardian Europe
Home»Culture
Culture

Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word of the Year: ‘Parasocial’ – an ‘unhealthy’ modern phenomenon

By staffNovember 18, 20255 Mins Read
Cambridge Dictionary’s 2025 Word of the Year: ‘Parasocial’ – an ‘unhealthy’ modern phenomenon
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

If you’re still sore about Taylor Swift not responding to your well wishes regarding her engagement to her beau Travis Kelce, then Cambridge Dictionary’s Word of the Yearwill speak to you: “Parasocial”.

The word is used to describe a relationship (or Parasocial Relationship – “PSR”) in which a person feels like they know a celebrity on a personal level even though they have never met them.

It’s only the second time that an adjective has been crowned Word of the Year, following “paranoid” in 2016, and Cambridge Dictionary defines this year’s word as: “involving or relating to a connection that someone feels between themselves and a famous person they do not know, a character in a book, film, TV series, etc., or an artificial intelligence.”

The term was coined in 1956 by sociologists Donald Horton and Richard Wohl, who wanted to describe how television viewers formed “para-social” relationships with TV personalities.

Since then, the phenomenon – linked to the language of fandom – has grown exponentially, as social media continues to foster parasocial relationships with celebrities, influencers and online personalities that people have no personal connection to in the real world.

Delving into why they chose “parasocial” as their Word of the Year, Cambridge Dictionary states: “As social media intensifies the intimacy that fans feel with their adored celebrities, and with the rise in popularity of AI companions that can take on personalities, the word for these one-way relationships – parasocial – is having its own moment.”

Colin McIntosh, Cambridge Dictionary Chief Editor, said the word “captures the 2025 zeitgeist” and demonstrates how language changes.

“Parasocial stood out in 2025 for several reasons. Public interest in the term increased massively this year, as we can see from our data: the number of searches for it in the Cambridge Dictionary as well as on Google spiked on several occasions.”

He added: “It’s interesting from a language point of view because it has made the transition from an academic term to one used by ordinary people in their social media posts. And it also captures the zeitgeist of 2025, as the public’s fascination with celebrities and their lifestyles continues to reach new heights.”

An example cited by Cambridge Dictionary is Taylor Swift, who announced her engagement to NFL star Travis Kelce this year. This led to many fans expressing their heartfelt feelings toward a couple that most have never met.

“Global coverage of the way in which Taylor Swift announced her engagement to Travis Kelce caused lookups of parasocial to surge as the media dissected fans’ reactions,” states Cambridge Dictionary. “Posts by fans say “I’m not being parasocial about it” and talk about “a Swiftie being parasocial for ten minutes straight”.”

The use of the term has surged this year, particularly as concerns over the connections that some people have started to develop with AI chatbots.

Simone Schnall, professor of experimental social psychology at the University of Cambridge, said that the rise of parasocial relationships “has redefined fandom, celebrity and, with AI, how ordinary people interact online.”

“We’ve entered an age where many people form unhealthy and intense parasocial relationships with influencers. This leads to a sense that people ‘know’ those they form parasocial bonds with, can trust them and even to extreme forms of loyalty. Yet it’s completely one-sided.”

She continued: “Parasocial trends take on a new dimension as many people treat AI tools like ChatGPT as ‘friends’, offering positive affirmations, or as a proxy for therapy. This is an illusion of a relationship and group think, and we know young people can be susceptible for this.”

Cambridge Dictionary also highlighted a number of other words that had a “significant impact” this year and made their shortlist.

Among them are “pseudonymization” (a process in which information that relates to a particular person is changed to a number or name that has no meaning so that it is impossible to see who the information relates to); “slop” (“content on the internet that is of very low quality, especially when it is created by artificial intelligence”); and “memeify” (“to turn an event, image, person, etc. into a meme”).

Other words they have been tracking in 2025 include:

  • Glazing: the excessive use of praise or flattery, especially by AI chatbots, in a way that seems insincere and artificial. It is sometimes seen as a way of compensating for weak input from an AI.
  • Bias: the object of a fan’s stanning (excessive devotion to a singer, band or other media star). It is used especially by fans of the South Korean music genre K-pop.
  • Vibey: a place that has a good vibe.
  • Doom spending: the activity of spending money that you do not have in order to make yourself feel better.

If you’re playing catch up with 2025’s words of the year, we’ve already had Dictionary.com’s crowning of the viral (and baffling) Gen Alpha slang term “6-7”, as well as Collins Dictionary’s pick of “vibe coding” – an emerging software development that turns natural language into computer code using AI.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Mountains, love and lube: The 10 most anticipated albums of 2026

Too scary to show? Kazakh horror series becomes festival favourite for gore fans

Sia dethrones Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas’ as Spotify’s top seasonal song

Trump warns against ‘Bad Santa’ and defends coal in Christmas call with kids

US Department of Homeland Security turns Santa into an ICE agent in ‘digusting’ AI video

Me, myself and I: Meet Celia Paul, the solitary self-portrait artist exposing herself in Warsaw

Yuletide substitutes: What are the best alternative Christmas films?

Egypt completes restoration of towering Colossi of Memnon statues

Captured on canvas: a soldier paints a year of fighting against Russia’s war on Ukraine

Editors Picks

Ukraine anti-corruption agency blocked during probe into MPs bribery scheme – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

UK trade unions urge Labour to revisit EU customs union – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

9 arrested and €8 million seized in illicit Hamas financing probe in Italy

December 27, 2025

Video. Latest news bulletin | December 27th, 2025 – Midday

December 27, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Europe and world news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

EPP’s Weber leaves door open to more votes with far right in European Parliament – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

NATO chief Rutte rejects EU defense breakaway from US – POLITICO

December 27, 2025

Mountains, love and lube: The 10 most anticipated albums of 2026

December 27, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2025 Daily Guardian Europe. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.