LCR

This stands for least-cost routing and is a scheme initiated by the Reserve Bank to cut card payment processing fees for businesses in the hope that this will result in less cost to consumers.

ZG: 4

This term may have increased exposure if the Reserve Bank is obliged to enforce it.

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Sue ButlerComment
polygenic risk score

No one can predict the future, particularly when it comes to the development of a disease.  The best we can do is evaluate the risk of acquiring one.  This is where genomic analysis may be able to help. 

ZG: 4

This is a piece of medical jargon but one which we may all get to know, despite the complications.

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Sue ButlerComment
thermal runaway

This is not a new term but one that has entered mainstream communications because of the large number of battery fires we are getting from e-scooters and e-bikes that have lithium batteries.

ZG: 4

While there is a lot of concern about exploding batteries, in discussions of the subject people tend to steer clear of explaining how a battery works.

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Sue ButlerComment
greedflation

There has been much discussion about which sector of the community has been suffering most from inflation, and which sector has been contributing to inflation.  The activities of business in putting up prices has come to be seen as a significant driver of inflation. 

ZG: 5

There is keen interest in the issue of greedflation at the moment and various proposals that will work their way through parliament.

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Sue ButlerComment
clout chaser

It has been around since 2016 but just surfaced in mainstream media in Sydney because the man accused of murdering Jesse Baird and his partner was described as an ex-boyfriend and a clout chaser.

ZG: 6

A word in common use in the world that focuses on celebrities and influencers.

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Sue Butler Comments
free birthing

Free birthing or wild birthing is giving birth without the assistance of a medically qualified person.   Such a birth is also called an unassisted birth or an unregulated birth

ZG: 4

This is an attractive name that gives a glossy shine to a doubtful practice.

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Sue ButlerComment
bitch and fold

This is a strategy, adopted frequently by political parties and given its name by Katherine Murphy (pictured above) in her time as a journalist for the Guardian Australia.  She used it to describe the behaviour of the Labor opposition at the time but it is being used now for the Liberal Party in opposition.

ZG: 7

Anyone interested in Australian politics will be discussing the bitch and fold at the moment, and it will be there for us to pick up and use as seems appropriate in the future.

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Sue Butler Comment
fast-follow

In the IT world a fast-follow is the release of a product with pretty well all of the promised features with an update asap to complete the just-published version rather than save it for the next version.

ZG: 4

The specialised jargon of the IT industry.

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Sue Butler Comments
obelisk

The latest discovery in the field of microorganisms has been named the obelisk by the Stanford University team which discovered it.  The obelisk (so named from its rod-like shape) is comprised of loops of RNA and an enzyme which allows it to replicate when it enters a human cell. 

ZG: 3

There is too little known about these micro-organisms for us all to get engaged with them.

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Sue ButlerComment
right to disconnect

Our new right is the right to disconnect, that is the legal right to not respond to work calls or messages or emails once you have finished work for the day.

ZG: 5

it is something that affects the working population so it is reasonably well known.

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Sue ButlerComment
dopamenu

People who have ADHD can find it beneficial to have a dose of natural dopamine at different times, particularly when they are struggling with focus or motivation.  The dopamine menu has been popularised by a couple of bloggers in the ADHD arena and is set out to make it easier to categorise activities and make it more fun.

ZG: 4

This is a restricted to those with ADHD although we could all benefit from a sprinkling of rewards and treats to help us get through the day.

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Sue ButlerComment
AI hallucination

There’s always something to spoil perfection.  Just as we discover this wonderful new toy, generative AI, that will create texts for us while we go off and have a cup of tea, we find that it is capable of making mistakes, and of presenting those mistakes in its generated texts with all the plausibility of Donald Trump making election promises.

ZG: 6

This is an interesting one because we should all be aware of the danger that hallucinations present in AI-generated text, but I suspect we are not taking it as seriously as we should.

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Sue ButlerComment
personality hire

This is the person employed because they have charisma rather than technical know-how.  A capacity to establish rapport with colleagues and make everyone happy will be increasingly important.

ZG: 5

This is a term that is popular in business jargon at the moment. It will probably endure as the workplace character and culture changes.

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Sue ButlerComment
just-in-case

This is the opposite of just-in-time. They are both systems for managing inventory for production.  Just-in-time (JIT) supplies materials more or less just as they are needed whereas just-in-case (JIC) secures materials ahead of time to make sure that they are available when they are needed.

ZG: 5

Very much a jargon word of particular businesses but part of the current preoccupation with supply lines and production.

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Sue ButlerComment
delulu

This is short for delusional and become a smear word ten years ago in K-Pop for obsessive fans who really thought that their idol would fall in love with them and marry them. 

ZG: 8

A colloquialism that has taken off.

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Sue ButlerComment
shadow work

Carl Jung expounded on the idea of the shadow self, a term he coined for the parts of the self that are hidden in our consciousness.  We all present an image of ourselves to the world that is as we want ourselves to be, but buried in our unconscious mind are other aspects of ourselves that are equally potent but not to our liking. 

ZG: 6

A jargon word of the wellness business. You are either wholeheartedly into shadow work or you have never heard of it.

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HealthSue ButlerComment
friendshoring

First we had offshoring, the movement of production of goods out of the country of origin to other countries where the cost of production is lower and the workers are less empowered. Now we have friendshoring.

ZG: 6

A jargon word of politics and business but much in use at the moment.

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PoliticsSue ButlerComment
UCC

A UCC (Urgent Care Clinic) deals with illnesses, medical conditions and accidents that are not life-threatening and do not require an ambulance to take the patient directly to hospital, but are serious enough to require immediate attention.

ZG: 7

Government advertising is slowly spreading the word about UCCs so in time we should all be familiar with them.

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MedicineSue ButlerComment
ladder up

This phrase has been part of the jargon of finance and business for a while now but I think it is emerging into broader contexts. 

ZG: 5

Still a jargon word for the knowledgeable with overtones of business and marketing expertise.

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crash blossom

People have been commenting on amusingly ambiguous headlines for many a decade so I am not sure why one particular example has given the class of such ambiguities a name. 

ZG: 5

This is probably one for the wordlovers and language commentators.

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Arts LItSue ButlerComment