"Shovel-ready" has dug its way into the  Australian vernacular and been crowned the Macquarie Dictionary's  word of the year for 2009.
The adjective was chosen from a list of new words selected for  inclusion in the annual update of the Macquarie Dictionary Online.
The word refers to a building or infrastructure project capable  of being initiated immediately, as soon as funding is assured.
Macquarie Dictionary editor Susan Butler said the word was  chosen by the Word of the Year Committee because of its topicality  and its visually graphic nature.
"The committee felt that this word was associated with one of  the major preoccupations of 2009 - how to avoid a recession," Ms  Butler said in a statement on Wednesday.
"Shovel-ready projects were worthy to receive money from the  economic stimulus package because they could provide jobs  immediately."
In the people's choice category the most popular word was  "tweet", meaning to post a message on the social network site  Twitter.
The committee gave an honourable mention to several other words,  including "head-nodder", meaning a supporter of a politician or  other media figure who stands beside them in the frame of a  television shot and nods his or her head in agreement with what the  speaker is saying.
Other words receiving an honourable mentions were "cyberbully",  defined as a person who bullies another using email, chat rooms,  social network sites, and "roar factor", referring to the influence  that a home crowd has on a referee or umpire in making  adjudications.






