Golden Bull award
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Golden Bull Award is an awarded annually by the Plain English Campaign to a person who has made what is deemed by the campaign to be a confusing and bad use of English. Started in 1980, this award has been famously (or infamously) given to the NHS for a 229 word definition of a bed, and in 1981 winners were sent a parcel of tripe through the mail.
[edit] Past "Winners"
- 2004: Bank of Scotland, British Airways, Department of Health, European Commission, The GENIUS Project (based at the University of Reading), Panorama Software, Trilogy Telecom, TriMedia