What is ‘Semiquincentennial’? The word confusing internet ahead of America’s 250th anniversary

Wait 5 sec.

The official term for America's 250th anniversary has sent many reaching for a dictionary and an easier alternative.3 min readJul 2, 2026 12:18 AM IST First published on: Jul 2, 2026 at 12:12 AM IST ShareWhatsapptwitterFacebookWhether Americans ultimately embrace "Semiquincentennial" or simply stick with "America250," the unfamiliar word has already become an unexpected symbol of the country's biggest national celebration in half a century. (Ai-generated image/GIF)As the United States prepares to celebrate the 250th anniversary of its independence on July 4, 2026, one unusual word has become almost as widely discussed as the milestone itself: “Semiquincentennial”. The formal name for America’s 250th birthday has puzzled many Americans, prompting confusion, jokes and a search for simpler alternatives.What does ‘Semiquincentennial’ actually mean?The term breaks down into Latin roots: “semi” (half), “quin” (five) and “centennial” (hundred years), together denoting half of five hundred years, or 250 years. It is the formally adopted term used by the US Semiquincentennial Commission, the body Congress established in 2016 to organise the anniversary, according to America250.org, the commission’s official nonprofit support organisation.By contrast, the term for a 200th anniversary, “Bicentennial,” used widely during the famous 1976 celebrations, is far more familiar to American ears, which is part of why its 250-year successor has struggled for recognition, according to the lifestyle and retail site The Flag Shirt’s explainer on the anniversary.Also ReadWhy the confusion?Unlike “Bicentennial”, “Semiquincentennial” does not roll off the tongue, and several alternative terms have circulated for the same anniversary, including “Sestercentennial,” “Bisesquicentennial” and “Quarter Millennium,” according to background compiled on the Semiquincentennial’s Wikipedia entry. The proliferation of competing terms none as catchy as “Bicentennial” has added to public uncertainty about what to even call the milestone.To sidestep the tongue-twister altogether, the commission itself markets the celebration under a simpler banner: “America250,” a phrase used far more often in public-facing campaigns, merchandise and events than the formal term, according to America250.org.Story continues below this adThe official versus popular brandingThe branding split is also visible at the federal level. The congressionally chartered America250 Commission, chaired by former US Treasurer Rosie Rios, uses “America250” prominently across its website and programming, according to America250.org.Meanwhile, a separate White House Task Force 250, established by President Donald Trump’s Executive Order 14189 in January 2025, runs its own parallel “Freedom 250” campaign through agencies including the State Department and the Small Business Administration, according to the official websites of the White House and the US Department of State.This has meant Americans are simultaneously being introduced to “Semiquincentennial,” “America250” and “Freedom 250” as names for events tied to the same underlying anniversary a naming overlap that commentators say has only added to the puzzlement.Most ReadA milestone two and a half centuries in the makingWhatever it is called, the scale of the commemoration is significant. It spans 21 Smithsonian museums, 14 research centres and the National Zoo under the Smithsonian’s “Our Shared Future: 250” programme, and includes a one-year-only redesign of US circulating coins, the dime, quarter and half-dollar by the United States Mint to mark the occasion, according to the Smithsonian Institution and the US Mint’s official website.Story continues below this adThe confusion over the word itself, commentators note, has not dented public interest in the anniversary if anything, the unfamiliar term has become a minor talking point that has helped draw attention to the milestone itself.With inputs from America250.org, the US Mint, the Smithsonian Institution and the US Department of StateAdvertisementLoading Recommendations...Advertisement