Time magazine reported that the American company Miriam Webster, best known for publishing reference books and dictionaries in particular, chose Justice JUSTICE (Word of the Year 2018), which came slightly different from other dictionaries.

As each company specializing in dictionaries tries to mention a particular word that has captured the minds of the public in the past year, the data from Miriam Webster requires that the chosen word be the one that people are most interested in searching for.

She explains that the word - which has been the subject of research for people throughout 2018, according to Miriam Webster - was "justice". "This year, we have been in particular," said Peter Sokolowski, a senior editor at the American firm.

Adalah has several definitions, ranging from "matching truth or logic" to the Byzantine definition of "safeguarding or applying what is fair through the neutral settlement of conflicting claims or determining the rewards or penalties that are due."

Increasing the search for "justice" in light of the influx of investigative cases (Piccapi)

Judicial reforms
The magazine added that people sought the word when reality TV star Kim Kardashian visited the White House twice this year to discuss issues related to judicial reform in US prisons and the achievement of "criminal justice."

In her report, she noted that readers sought a better understanding of the word, at a time when politicians and demonstrators called for "ethnic justice, economic justice and social justice" through various forums and forums such as social media, election campaigns and football fields.

The search for the word "justice" intensified in early August when President Donald Trump asked former Justice Secretary Jeff Sessions to stop investigations by Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller on Russian intervention in the 2016 presidential election immediately.

She says people have used the word this year because it suggests briefly that the US system works in the way it is supposed to signify that it is a state governed by laws, not just power.

Sokolowski believes that justice "involves the bureaucracy of justice, and the expectation that one's argument in a case is heard."

Oxford chose the dictionary "toxic" and "Decinchery.com" chose "misinformation".