No new keywords will be added with C++14. This is unsurprising as C++14 is intended as a small upgrade to C++11 mainly involved in cleaning up bugs and making small, low impact, improvements. The next major change is likely to be C++'17' where I would expect new keywords once more.
The C++ Standards Committee tends to shy away from adding new keywords
to the language, yet with C++11 that was not the case.
I think it's worth considering why the committee shies away from adding new keywords (and co-incidentally why you are wrong to include auto
on your list). The main problem with new keywords is that in C++ you can't use a keyword as an identifier which means that adding a new keyword breaks existing code. Repurposing auto
, then, doesn't break their rule because no existing code could use auto
as an identifier anyway.
So in order to accept a new keyword there needs to be a justification that outweighs the cost of a potential clash with existing code and no sensible way to implement the same thing without a new keyword. In the case of C++11, the committee accepted a few proposals that required new keywords since they felt that that the benefit outweighed the cost not because they don't hate to add new keywords.
It's also why, if you look down the list you gave, each one is a compound keyword since that reduces the chance that they'll clash with existing identifiers.