Advertisement
IRL

Merriam-Webster’s Twitter kindly defines ‘sequela’ for people watching Christine Ford

It’s a medical term.

Photo of Sunny Kim

Sunny Kim

christine blasey ford and rachel mitchell

The word “sequela” and “sequelae” spiked over 46,000 searches on Thursday after Christine Blasey Ford mentioned the word in her testimony.

Featured Video

When asked by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) why she waited until now to share the details on her allegations, Ford said she only shared the information with her therapist because she felt that it was an “appropriate place to cope with the sequelae of the event.”

Ford is a research psychologist at Stanford University Medical School and a professor of psychology at Palo Alto University. That might explain why she’s comfortable using words such as “sequela” and “hippocampus.”

People watching the live testimony hastily started to search the definition of the word “sequela,” which is a medical term describing the secondary results of a disease, condition, or injury, according to Merriam-Webster. The condition Ford is referring to is what she says she experienced as Kavanaugh’s attempt to rape her when she was a teenager. The word “sequelae” is the plural form of sequela.

Advertisement

On the spot, the online dictionary’s Twitter account quickly shared the definition of the word to its 730,000 followers. People thanked Merriam-Webster for clarifying.

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/candymh46/status/1045341750607265793

https://twitter.com/CatherineGrams/status/1045345052652961792

Advertisement

There were also other words Ford used in her testimony that increased the search engine, including “indelible” and “exculpatory.”

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/lisaztweets/status/1045346560060661760

(Exculpatory is a legal term that means, basically, favorable evidence for a trial’s defendant.)

 
The Daily Dot