Just checked on the official website for scrabble (no word found for soduko)---but ludo was OK
Also--bokeh was not allowed !!! (out of focus portion of a photo)
wonder if the website is not up to date?
The official British scrabble word list is based on Collins English Dictionary which does not include the word BOKEH. The American list is based on Merriam-Webster, which does.
I'd imagine there's an interval (probably getting shorter) between the arrival of a popular brand and its name entering the lexicon (e.g Biro, Hoover). Shorter still with social media neologisms like Twitter-"tweet" and Google->"google".
VE, i love the old-fashioned googol - ie 1 followed by a hundred noughts. Googolplex was 1 followed by a googol noughts. (I've probably got this wrong, but I'm sure some kind clever person will be able to politely correct me.)
// Shorter still with social media neologisms like Twitter-"tweet" and Google->"google".//
tweet is old innit ? like eighteenth century or something
The immortal Michael (owww!) Jackson sang a memorable chorus in "Rackin Rarbin" - 'tweet! twiddly tweet!"
and google as eny fule kno is from googleplex - google is a number ( a very large one as it turns out ) and a googleplex is a google to the power of a google. Social historians and French mediaeval linguists need to lie down when they read things like that.
//A googolplex is the number 10googol, or equivalently, 10(10100). Written out in ordinary decimal notation, it is 1 followed by 10100 zeroes, that is, a 1 followed by a googol zeroes.//
// that could explain why a few other words don't appear in all dictionaries-//
I dont think Dr Johnson ( who wrote a very famous one) ever implied or stated that if a word was not listed in this Dictionary - then it didnt exist
( cue fave Dr J stories)
asked why he had defined a pastern as the horse's knee instead of the ankle he answered: ignorance Marm sheer ignorance.
actually it appears to be an interphalangeal joint but what the hell this IS AB and no one is reading this.
Anybody who understands the words "lexicon" and "neologism" will know that "google" did not appear in any twentieth century English dictionary. Similarly a specific meaning of "tweet" as a verb.