In these trying times, a hero sometimes emerges in the most unexpected of places. Case in point: in 2018, the official Twitter account for Dictionary.com seems to have leaned hard into the political sphere, and the results are rather dazzling. The account is really only using what it has at its disposal . . . which is, quite literally, the dictionary. This leads to all kinds of fodder when applied to tweets published by President Donald Trump and the other members of his administration; Dictionary.com is nitpicking spelling, misuse of words and phrases, and even more apt definitions for today's seemingly buzzy terms, like "fake news." It even had a rather pointed word of the year in 2017. But we'll stop blabbering — when it comes to words, we'll just let the tweets speak for themselves.
How do you say that? "Wih-chunt"? "Which-unt"?
In case you're not familiar, it's a real thing that happened in January: tickets to invited guests were all mistakenly printed with "State of the Uniom" on them.
Right after his meeting with Vladimir Putin, of course.
Gotta love the tweets that contain the phrase "[Name] says [this]." Usually it comes with quite a bit of sarcasm. Kind of like that Kylie Jenner situation.