The venerable 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary contains about 700,000 words, but the editors recently realized they were miss

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问题     The venerable 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary contains about 700,000 words, but the editors recently realized they were missing one: Doh!
    The cartoon character Homer Simpson’s forehead-smacking lament is one of some 250 entries being added today to the dictionary, which is widely considered the leading authority on the English language.
    "Doh" is now defined as "Expressing frustration at the realization that things have turned out badly or not as planned, or that one has just said or done something foolish," according to the new entry in the dictionary.
    The Simpsons only popularized the term; it was actually used extensively in the 1950s, the OED found. Although it is often spelled "D’oh," the dictionary chose to omit the apostrophe.
    Other newcomers to the dictionary include cheesy, which means second-rate or inferior; six-pack, meaning rippling abdominal muscles, and Bollywood, which refers to the Hindi film industry based in Bombay, India.
    "We’ll have terms from immuno-biology to gangster rap," says Jesse Sheidlower, who is head of the project for North America.
    The OED’s staff of 50 editors is wading through popular culture looking for new words and usages that merit an entry, as part of its 8-year-old $55 million updating project. It is the first complete revision of the dictionary since it was completed in 1928.
    "The principle way we get new entries is to have readers look around the world for things that seem new or significant," says John Simpson, chief editor of the OED. Contributors have included a Nobel laureate and an inmate at an insane asylum, among thousands of others.
    "We have about 200,000 example sentences coming into the department each year."
    Simpson (John, not Homer) and his colleagues whittle that list down to the few that seem to have got a solid foothold in popular usage. He says his job also gives him an excuse to watch a lot of action films, soap operas and quiz shows, to look for more new terms.
    "Many terms are much older than you think they are," says Sheidlower.
"Phat," for example, makes its debut in the OED today as a slang term meaning cool.
    But it has been African-American slang since at least the 1960s, OED researchers found. The word even appeared with its present meaning in Time magazine in 1963.
    The dictionary contains some surprises for people who think they are using the latest, cutting-edge jargon.
John Simpson and his colleagues cut down the number of new words based on the principle of_______.

选项 A、economy
B、originality
C、significance
D、popularity

答案D

解析 倒数第5段首句中的a solid foothold in popular usage表明Simpson和他的同事是根据流行程度决定哪个词留用,哪个词删除,可见本题应选D。第8段首句中的new,significant指的是广泛选词的原则。而不是题干中提到的“删词的原则”。
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