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Min Read Time
Stuff. Thingamajig. Whatchamacallit.
If your day job isn’t in desktop publishing or graphic design (or teaching it), you and your yearbook team probably use those words to get across what you’re trying to say. You know what it is you’re trying to say, but you just … can’t … find … the yearbook terms you need to do it in a way that makes sense to everyone.
So, you use filler that causes more confusion than clarity.
We’ve talked to a bunch of yearbook advisers, and a lack of proper yearbook vocabulary is a common problem. Especially when new people join the team. We figured, then, that it would be good to pull together a list of yearbook terms everyone needs to know (and a whole bunch more that just about everyone should know).
Study up, and you could be skipping this type of painful conversation in nearly no time at all:
“We need to get that thing on page 8 done, so we can get those pages proofed?”
“What stuff?”
“You know… the… the… It’s right next to the whatchamacallit.”
“I’m not really sure what you’re talking about… You mean the thingamajig that I was working on?”
(Ouch.)
And, besides avoiding a conversation as bad and confusing as this, who doesn’t like learning new… uhh… stuff?
Got ‘em?
Though it might seem like a waste to study these terms, we promise it’ll prove helpful in the long run. Just imagine how much more sense it will make to talk about finishing your “mod” (instead of “thingamajig”) or how you need to find someone to do “copy editing” (instead of “editing all this stuff”).
Test your new-found knowledge with our quiz.