November 11, 2021

First, people claimed that Merriam-Webster sneakily changed the definition of the word “anti-vaxxer” to include people who oppose laws that mandate vaccination. (It didn’t. It has always had the same definition.)

Now, social media posts are making another gripe with the online dictionary with assertions that it changed the definition of the word “vaccine.”

“Vaccine used to be defined as a substance that provides ‘immunity’ to a specific disease,” a post shared on Facebook said. “Now, Merriam Webster has literally changed the definition of ‘vaccine’ and removed the ‘immunity’ portion to possibly cover for the fact that Covid ‘vaccines’ don’t actually provide immunity from Covid.”

This is misleading. Merriam-Webster has revised its entry for the word “vaccine” as part of its continual revision of entries, but it did not remove references to immunity. Rather, it changed the phrase “increase immunity” to say, “stimulate the body’s immune response.” The current entry better captures how mRNA-based vaccines work compared with traditional vaccines.

The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat potential false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

For years, the dictionary definition for the word “vaccine” had had the following wording:

A preparation of killed microorganisms, living attenuated organisms, or living fully virulent organisms that is administered to produce or artificially increase immunity to a particular disease.

On May 24, 2021, dictionary editors revised it to read, in part:

A preparation that is administered (as by injection) to stimulate the body’s immune response against a specific infectious agent or disease.

It then goes on to include 10 examples of the word in use; with some being typical uses and some being quotations that show how vaccine is used in context. (These examples appear in light blue text in the online dictionary.)

“This definition has been revised to reflect both more scientifically accurate language and the fact that we have more space in the online dictionary,” said Peter Sokolowski, editor at large of Merriam-Webster.com. “We are now able to provide much more context and detail than previously possible in print dictionaries. The wording had originally been drafted in order to accommodate the space restrictions of our print editions, where definitions necessarily had to be as brief as possible.”

The dictionary further explains and links to related terms such as “attenuated” and “adjuvant,” as well as “messenger RNA” and “immune response.” These explanations and links, Sokolowski said, serve to give broader coverage to the term being defined.

“In particular, the definition for immune response provides a detailed description of how a vaccine actually works, and is therefore more specific, scientific, and complete than the more general term immunity,” he added.

Here is the definition of “immune response,” which readers can find linked in the vaccine entry:

A bodily response to an antigen that occurs when lymphocytes identify the antigenic molecule as foreign and induce the formation of antibodies and lymphocytes capable of reacting with it and rendering it harmless — called also immune reaction.

Our ruling

A Facebook post claims that Merriam-Webster changed the definition of vaccine and removed the portion about immunity.

This is misleading. The dictionary did recently revise its definition of vaccine to be more detailed. But it didn’t eliminate the portion about immunity. Rather, it changed the wording to say that vaccines stimulate the body’s immune response against a specific infectious agent or disease. The entry also references the definition of “immune response,” which is more detailed than before.

This claim presents an element of truth but leaves out critical facts that would give a different impression. That’s our definition for Mostly False. ​​

This fact check was originally published by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute. It is republished here with permission. See the sources for this fact check here and more of their fact checks here.

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Samantha Putterman is a fact-checker for PolitiFact based in New York. Previously, she reported for the Bradenton Herald and the Tampa Bay Times. She is…
Samantha Putterman

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  • I’m sorry to see Poynter has killed its pop-up form for reporting errors.

    The fact check opens with:

    **First, people claimed that Merriam-Webster sneakily changed the definition of the word “anti-vaxxer” to include people who oppose laws that mandate vaccination. (It didn’t. It has always had the same definition.)**

    “It has always had the same definition” was apparently true when the linked fact check was published. It’s no longer true, so the fact check would improve by deleting the no-longer-true claim.

    As for the linked fact check, it offers the reader too little in terms of context, that being the fact that Merriam-Webster’s definition of “anti-vaxxer” seem to be a minority among dictionaries with its choice to “include people who oppose laws that mandate vaccination.”

    This fact check and the linked fact check both encourage the misperception that Merriam-Webster definitions supercede the definitions provided by all other dictionaries where the definitions do not match. It’s relevant for this type of story when dictionaries offer differing definitions.