Sentences with phrase «neologisms from»

Not exact matches

Havmor is a neologism for «have more» which means the customer gets more value for money and more taste to relish from...
They spent most of Monday doing their darndest to make everything worse, from defending manhandling a customer («We followed the right procedures») to blaming the passenger himself (claiming he was «disruptive») to coining a laughably bad neologism to describe their treatment of him («re-accommodated»).
From 56 - student New Harmony High in the utopian settlement of the same name, to sprawling Ben Davis High in suburban Indianapolis, with its largest - in - the - state enrollment of 2,798; from schools with picturesque handles like Turkey Run (enrollment 164) and Rising Sun (252), to consolidated districts that go by neologisms like Tri-West Hendricks (301) and Jac - Cen - Del (228), the eyes of March are on the tournamFrom 56 - student New Harmony High in the utopian settlement of the same name, to sprawling Ben Davis High in suburban Indianapolis, with its largest - in - the - state enrollment of 2,798; from schools with picturesque handles like Turkey Run (enrollment 164) and Rising Sun (252), to consolidated districts that go by neologisms like Tri-West Hendricks (301) and Jac - Cen - Del (228), the eyes of March are on the tournamfrom schools with picturesque handles like Turkey Run (enrollment 164) and Rising Sun (252), to consolidated districts that go by neologisms like Tri-West Hendricks (301) and Jac - Cen - Del (228), the eyes of March are on the tournament.
As biographer Graham Farmelo shows in Churchill's Bomb, Churchill managed to redeem his faltering performance as a minister in the first world war by elevating the «atomic bomb» from a neologism created by H. G. Wells to an existential risk in one deft essay, «Shall We All Commit Suicide?»
Suggested topics are new words, expressions, neologisms, neoterisms, sniglets, odd usages, reanimated words, words you never knew existed, words you wish existed, or even words you would like expurgated from the space - time continuum.
«Bhabharosi,» the title of Simphiwe Ndzube's show and several works therein, is a neologism the artist coined from the words «barbarous» and «rose» in isiXhosa, his native language, to refer to his protagonists.
As the neologism of the title suggests, the exhibition implicitly evokes the commercialisation of water, the natural resource that is vital for the survival of humanity, which nonetheless does not escape from marketing logics.
The overall theme is inspired by the neologism first coined in Japan, glocalization, or glocal, being a combination of global and local — derived from the Japanese word dochakuka which means global localization.
I had originally thought that I might post this neologism — if that's what such a collection of letters can be called — and invite members of Slaw to add any others they might come across from any legal source.
In practice, it will require a significant departure from how BigLaw (we use only this neologism) firms have traditionally operated for many to remain competitive.
Suggested topics are new words, expressions, neologisms, neoterisms, sniglets, odd usages, reanimated words, words you never knew existed, words you wish existed, or even words you would like expurgated from the space - time continuum.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z