From screens to Oxford! ‘Rage bait’ beats ‘aura farming,’ ‘biohack’ to become Word of 2025

Casper Grathwohl, president of Oxford University Press' languages division, said the growing use of such words ‘reveal how digital platforms are reshaping our thinking and behaviour’

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Updated1 Dec 2025, 05:26 PM IST
From screens to Oxford- ‘Rage bait’ beats ‘aura farming,’ ‘biohack’ to become Word of 2025
From screens to Oxford- ‘Rage bait’ beats ‘aura farming,’ ‘biohack’ to become Word of 2025

"Rage bait", the term describing online content designed to elicit anger and drive internet traffic, has been crowned 2025 word of the year, Oxford University Press (OUP) announced Monday. It beat out fellow shortlisted contenders "aura farming" and "biohack".

Oxford University Press said ‘rage bait’ – chosen through a combination of public voting, sentiment and analysis of OUP's “lexical data” – had "captured our emotions" this year. Citing its language monitoring data, OUP also said that the usage of the word has increased threefold in the last 12 months.

Casper Grathwohl, president of OUP's languages division, said the growing use of such words “reveal how digital platforms are reshaping our thinking and behaviour,” reported AFP.

"It feels like the natural progression in an ongoing conversation about what it means to be human in a tech-driven world – and the extremes of online culture," he added in a statement.

'Rage bait' vs ‘aura farming’ vs ‘biohack’

Rage bait beat its contenders "aura farming" and “biohack” to earn the Oxford Word of 2025 status.

‘Aura farming’ means "the cultivation of an impressive, attractive, or charismatic persona or public image by behaving or presenting oneself in a way intended subtly to convey an air of confidence, coolness, or mystique".

Meanwhile biohacking is an attempt "to improve or optimise one's physical or mental performance, health, longevity, or wellbeing by altering one's diet, exercise routine, or lifestyle, or by using other means such as drugs, supplements, or technological devices".

How ‘rage bait’ was selected word of the year?

More than 30,000 people worldwide voted over three days for their preferred winner, according to OUP.

Its final choice was also supported by evidence of "real language usage", after its experts tracked the use of the shortlisted words throughout the year via "a 30-billion-word corpus of global language data".

It is the fourth consecutive year that the public have played a part in picking Oxford's word of the year, after an inaugural public vote in 2022 saw "goblin mode" prevail.

In that instance, the public were given the chance to choose the overall winner, opting for the term describing "unapologetically self-indulgent, lazy, slovenly or greedy" behaviour.

In subsequent years, voting has played only a part in the choices, which have included 2023's “rizz” – a colloquial term defined as “style, charm, or attractiveness” – and last year's "brain rot".

Previous words of the year chosen solely by Oxford lexicographers include "vax" (2021), "climate emergency" (2019) and "selfie" (2013).

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