Each year brings us a new list of words that, once hip or subcultural, signal their admission into the mainstream by entering the pagesâprint or onlineâof the Oxford English Dictionary or Merriam Websterâs. The form is a veritable laboratory of linguistic innovation, spawning dozens of region-specific argots that mutate and evolve beyond the capacity of hip lexicographers to document. One data scientist, Matt Daniels, has made an interesting attempt, however, in a project he calls âThe Largest Vocabulary in Hip Hop.â Proceeding from the premise that certain rappers might match or best Shakespeare for the title of âlargest vocabulary ever,â Daniels used a methodology called âtoken analysisâ to analyze the lyrical content of âthe most famous artists in hip hop.” He relied on Rap Genius transcriptions, which are only current to 2012, to produce a sample size of 35,000 words (the equivalent of 3-5 studio albums).
Topping the list by far with a total of 7,392 unique words used is rapper Aesop Rock, whom, Daniels admits, is somewhat obscure by comparison with Jay Z or Snoop Dog. More well-known artists like Wu Tang Clan, The Roots, and Outkast also rank highly, but what Daniels discovered is that many of the rappers near the top of the scale are underground or obscure artists who donât sell millions of records. And occupying the lower end are some top-selling artists and household names like Lil Wayne, Kanye West, and Snoop Dog (DMX is dead last at #85). King of the hill Jay-Z, whose 2013 album Magna Carta…Holy Grail sold half a million copies in its first week, ranks somewhere in the middle, and Daniels quotes from lyrics on the mega-selling rapperâs âMoment of Clarityâ from his Black Album in which he plainly admits that he’ll write middlebrow lyrics for million dollar sales figures, rapping âI dumbed down for my audience to double my dollars” (one wonders how many listeners perceived the slight).
Daniels admits in an NPR interview that this is ânot a serious academic studyâ but a project he undertook for the fun of it. And a great many of the âunique wordsâ counted in each rapperâs totals are slang coinages or variants like âpimps, pimp, pimping, and pimpin,â each of which counts separately. Even so, writes Daniels on projectâs site, âitâs still directionally interesting,â as well as sociologically. And of course, literary writers have been contributing made-up words to the general lexicon for centuries. See Danielsâ site for an interactive visualization (screen shot above) of the rankings of all 85 rappers surveyed.
If you’re wondering who has a bigger vocabulary — Shakespeare or rappers — here’s the quick answer. Using a sample size of 35,000 words per artist, Daniels determined that Aesop Rock used 7,392 unique words (and Wu-Tang Clan, 5,895) against Shakespeare’s 5,000 unique words. And there you have it.
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
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Do Rappers Have a Bigger Vocabulary Than Shakespeare?: A Data Scientist Maps Out the Answer
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