A discussion on the radio show "On The Media" about Google's data gathering used this word: anonymize. You can click on the embedded link below to hear the talk between host Bob Garfield and Alissa Cooper of the Center for Democracy and Technology.
Here is the definition of anonymize from Wiktionary: to render anonymous. Merriam-Webster Online does not have an entry for the word. Neither does my copy of Webster's New World College Dictionary. Dictionary.com has an entry and cites Webster's New Millennium Dictionary of English. At OneLook.com, two medical dictionaries were cited. I believe the word comes from medical uses, when a researcher makes data anonymous so that a subject's privacy can be protected. The Oxford English Dictionary offers this definition of anonymized:
Made anonymous, esp. by the removal of names or identifying particulars; spec. designating a form of medical screening, performed chiefly for statistical purposes, in which the identities of the subjects are unknown to the investigators.
We like to make new words by adding -ize to words we already know. See this entry in the American Heritage Book of English Usage. Merriam-Webster's has an entry on the suffix -ize and notes that almost any noun or adjective can be turned into a verb with -ize: familiar - familiarize, hospital - hospitalize. As the dictionary also notes, finalize and prioritize draw critical fire as jargon. John Bremner in "Words on Words" found fault with those words, among others. Theodore M. Bernstein in "The Careful Writer" wrote that the suffix "is one of the devices that have helped the English language grow. But it has also in some instances helped it grow stuffy or grotesque." H.L. Mencken was particularly dismissive of -ize words. (See his chapter on word formation.)
Early in my career, I was drilled by supervising editors to change finalize to complete or finish and to avoid any coinage that merely appended -ize (or -ism) to words. I would consider changing anonymize in a reporter's copy -- not in a quote, of course -- to "make anonymous." Readers might stumble over the unfamiliar anonymize, and clarity is important in any writing but especially in journalism.


Comments
dertghjadet sancısına ne
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günaydın mesajları demi
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çetleşme jklşi
çet sohbet - hjklşhikayeler - htres çet sohbet asd
müzik dinle fgtre -sohbet - gbnmöçtürkü dinle jmöç
şarkı dinle ujklş
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escort bayanlar -frty
rted- sohbet - gerkapak laflar - ert
sohbet peki
Make Taller how can you grow
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I never understand
Tue, 07/28/2009 - 02:57 — makemineI never understand this
About Freeware
You have a way of regularly
Mon, 09/15/2008 - 09:38 — baldezarYou have a way of regularly bringing up peeves of mine, and this is another one. I am always annoyed when writers and speakers are so lazy or so much in a hurry (or maybe just so dumb) as to verbize a noun or adjective instead of using one or two real words.
Laziness
Thu, 09/18/2008 - 05:06 — Pam_Nelson (author)I agree that writers and speakers are sometimes lazy or lackadaisical in their use of the language, but new words enter common use because they prove useful. "Familiarize" takes the place of "become familiar with" not just because it is shorter but because the concept is clearer. To "hospitalize" someone has a specific connotation that putting someone in the hospital does not. As you demonstrated in your comment, "verbizing" a noun can create a word that says exactly what you mean.
Pam Nelson
Triangle Grammar Guide