Scrabble is finally entering the 21st century with the introduction of 5,000 new words to its Official Scrabble Players Dictionary, due out Aug. 6 from Merriam-Webster.
This month's refresher—the first in almost a decade—adds tech-savvy words like "texter," "vlog," "hashtag," and "selfie," among others.
The fifth edition of the Scrabblers' bible hits shelves Wednesday, with a new "geocache" entry—a word chosen by fans during this year's Scrabble Word Showdown. Digital versions of the dictionary will be available for iOS, Android, and Kindle later this month.
But participants in the upcoming 2014 National Scrabble Championship in Buffalo, New York will not be playing new words like "bromance" or "schmutz," which will be sanctioned for official use on Dec. 1.
While Merriam-Webster did not reveal all 5,000 new words, the dictionary maker did provide a sample list (below).
"Language is constantly evolving and new words are added to Merriam-Webster dictionaries on an ongoing basis," Peter Sokolowski, Merriam-Webster editor at large, said in a statement. "Now thousands of those words can officially be played on the Scrabble game board."
According to the Associated Press, the new words add about 40 pages to the dictionary, which already offers more than 100,000 playable words, including a number of two-letter winners.
These additions include "favorite words from the past decade, making game play even more entertaining and relevant," said Jonathan Berkowitz, vice president of global brand strategy at Hasbro.
Other improvements, according to the news site, include words and spellings used by English-speaking Canadians and Brits.
"With thousands of new words, this edition will boost scores for players of all levels," John Chew, co-president of the North American Scrabble Players Association (NASPA), said.
In 2011, the Collins Official Scrabble Words dictionary added words like "badware," "vlog," and "pharm."
In November, meanwhile, Oxford Dictionaries crowned the term "selfie""Word of the Year," following a 17,000 percent leap in usage since 2012, when "GIF" was
bestowed the same honor.