tl;dr:
The Chat FAQ uses the word "highlit" (sic) - this should be changed to "highlighted".
Full question:
On the FAQ for chat.stackoverflow.com, it says (emphasis mine):
To get another user's attention, mention them – type @ and then the first part of their name. Your mention will be highlit on their screen – @someone.
I saw the word "highlit" and thought it looked a bit strange, so I did a bit of research:
- I did an Google Ngram search for highlighted vs highlit and it showed highlighted appears far more frequently in books (though the linear scale doesn't show that "highlighted" appears about 1000 times more frequently than "highlit").
Likewise, Google itself has 102,000 results for "highlit" vs. 118,000,000 results for "highlighted".
The Wiktionary entry on highlit says in the usage notes:
- Sometimes regarded as a misconstruction.
- Used as an example of a misconstruction in books on language learning.
The following dictionaries1 have results for "highlighted" but do not for "highlit":
Highlit vs Highlighted - Oxford dictionaries (lists "highlighted" as a form of the verb "highlight")
Highlit vs Highlighted - Cambridge Dictionaries Online (gives "highlighted" as a usage example of the verb "highlight")
Highlit vs Highlighted - Collins ("highlighted" redirects to "highlight" but "highlighted" doesn't appear on the entry)
Highlit vs Highlighted - Merriam-Webster (lists "highlighted" as a form of the verb "highlight")
Highlit vs Highlighted - Dictionary.com (lists "highlighted" as a form of the verb "highlight")
Highlit vs Highlighted - The Free Dictionary (lists "highlighted" as a form of the verb "highlight")
1: These are the first six online dictionaries I found on Google.
- A question on the English Language & Usage Stack Exchange pointed out:
Most dictionaries seem to indicate that highlighted is the past tense for highlight, rather than highlit.
- The lines from the FAQ quoted above have gone unnoticed since at least as far back as 18th October, 20102 - or, at least, there's not been a question on meta about it.
2: the first time archive.org captured the chat FAQ.
While I concede that "highlit" is (to some) an acceptable word to use in the FAQ and not technically a typo as my title indicates, Since "highlit" does not appear in major dictionaries and is regarded as a misconstruction of the past tense form of "highlight", could it be changed to the much more widely accepted "highlighted"?