I stood up and applauded after Merriam-Webster said this in his new announcement

I stood up and applauded after Merriam-Webster said this in his new announcement
I stood up and applauded after Merriam-Webster said this in his new announcement

Being a living and breathed person in 2025 means that I am the first in my bloodline that I have to say certain prayers. Today is this: Merriam-Webster (yes, that Merriam-Webster, like that of dictionaries) launched an advertisement for its new “large language model”, and the shadow aimed at the large AI companies is clear quiiiite.

Twitter: @Merriamwebster

When IA companies use the term large language model, or LLM, which generally refers to a machine that is trained using a lot of pre -existing data, and uses that text database to process tasks and generate an answer. Chatgpt and Google Gemini use LLM technology.

NURPHOTO / GETTY IMAGES

Aerial view of a vast factory complex with numerous buildings, parking lots and surrounding construction areas under an expansive sky

Bloomberg / Getty Images

Related: 17 hysterical tweets this weekend

But, the way Merriam-Webster uses the term LLM is a bit different. In the announcement, they claim that its LLM uses more than 217,000 “rigorously defined parameters.” In addition, “never hallucin” and does not use data or electricity centers.

My shadow radar went out at this point in the ad. Only a second later was sent to Overdrive when Merriam-Webster reveals what is really “powerful tool that will change the way you communicate forever.”

Radar screen with circular grid and a sweeping line indicating scan movement

Marog-Pixcells / Getty Images

Advertisement

Advertisement

A dictionary.

Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, twelfth edition, standing on a simple background
Merriam-webster / via x.com

The announcement ends with an off voice that says: “There is artificial intelligence, and there is real intelligence.”

Person in a kitchen with wooden cabinets and a double oven, looking at hand near the mouth

Monterey Media/Courtesy of the Everett collection

Was. So. Gagged.

Person in a loose blouse poses with your hands up, looking surprised or expressive in a room

© CBC / Cortesy Everett Collection

Related: 19 romantic behaviors that are actually important red flags, and I am honestly surprised that we are still in love with them

There is artificial Intelligence and current intelligence? Gate! I stood up and applauded!

A woman lifts her arms enthusiastically in a bar with two sitting men looking

© touchstone television/courtesy of Everett Collection

Advertisement

Advertisement

It turns out that this announcement was not for any type of AI service that Merriam-Webster was introducing at all. The only new thing launched by the company in November is the new 12th edition of Dictionary Collegiate.

Merriam-Webster announces the new paper edition of its Dictionary Collegiate, which will be launched on November 18, 2025

I am far from being the only one who found a real delight in Merriam-Webster’s shadow. The Internet is absolutely buzzing and laughing for this bait and change.

@Jzux tweet:

A tweet says: “In a world of Ai Slp, be it a Merriam Webster.” I couldn’t have said it better.

Publication of social networks by @destiny_themee saying:

Related: 19 fun women who tweet things so funny that I woke up my roommate at 3 am and is now threatening to move

A user tweeted: “Marketing ate with this.”

A publication of social networks of @jerrylime33 says,

Advertisement

Advertisement

Another simply responded with the definition of “ATE.” They wrote: “You RN”.

Merriam-Webster screen capture that shows the definition of the verb suffix

They had us all in the first half, clearly: “I can’t believe I was about to get angry with Merriam-Webster. I’m sorry, I didn’t understand your game.”

A Rathgames tweet expressing surprise and apologies for misunderstanding the Merriam-Webster

The live images of all are random to this video:

@yastr1p/@jzux/@meriamwebster/via Twitter: @yast1p

Shakespeare could not have written this. Aristotle would have been lost by words. Plato would have begun to cry: “There are good nerds (people in the humanities) and there are bad nerds (bros), and the good nerds need our support.”

@Katherinomarino tweet:

Advertisement

Advertisement

Related: 19 things that society glorifies that they are actually directly terrible, and we must stop pretending otherwise

@mslm_97/@jzux/@merriamwebster/via Twitter: @mslm_97

I’ve been applauding for a week, personally.

@Famnim1/@jzux/@merriamwebster/via Twitter: @Famnim1

Merriam-Webster’s responses have also been gold. Especially this shade.

Tweets exchange: Maximillian doubts
@Maxradniecki /@Merriamwebster / via x.com

Everyone needs a friend like Merriam-Webster.

Twitter exchange where Megan asks about data storage; Merriam-Webster jokes about storing data on paper and brain, then reassures Megan who is intelligent
@dxxzaii /@merriamwebster / via x.com

Advertisement

Advertisement

For once I feel better after Move on Twitter, and everything is thanks to a dictionary company. Well done, Merriam-Webster, well done.

Tweet Exchange where Dhwani expresses love for Merriam-Webster, and Merriam-Webster responds with love in exchange
@dhwanisaiya /@merriamwebster / via x.com

Also on the Internet findings: 31 horrible facts that I learned against my will and now you have to suffer with me

Also on the Internet findings: “I still feel like a horrible person almost 20 years later”: 19 “dark secrets” giants who kept themselves for themselves

Also on the Internet findings: 27 photos that literally never stop making me laugh without control, no matter how many times I have seen them

Read it on Buzzfeed.com

(Tagstotranslate) Merriam-Webster (T) Artificial Intelligence (T) Twitter (T) Language Model (T) LLM

Source link