Sentences with phrase «neologisms in»

The four tables give the most commonly accepted dates or ranges of dates for the Old Testament / Hebrew Bible, the Deuterocanonical books (included in Roman Neologisms in the 21st Century Kerry Maxwell 1.
We've coined a neologism in the Higher Ed cohort: triple midnight.
Brooks focuses his concern on the parenting style of privileged Americans, coining a brilliant neologism in the process, «pediacracy,» by which he means the determination of affluent parents to give their kids a leg up.

Not exact matches

After the Bard, the earliest printed reference appears to be a 1994 Globe and Mail article by John Bentley Mays (in which the author suggests a police horse might enjoy the watery treat) but he is clearly indulging in the slang of the day, not coining a neologism.
The patent, which was granted in February, is for a system that will examine posts and messages on the social network and look for something called neologisms.
No new grandiose neologism (the favourite of late is «North American energy security,» which presumably aims to get Americans to think about the energy market as the missing piece in the larger economic integration process underpinned by NAFTA).
While not quite her coinage (as her publisher erroneously claims), «dhimmitude» is a neologism to which Ye'or gave wide circulation in France.
This definition enormously complicates the task of including both testaments of the Christian Bible within the same theology, so much so, in Barr's view, that he has doubts about the possibility of there ever being one «pan-biblical theology,» to use his unfortunate neologism.
He solved it, or got round it, in the way philosophers and scientists have always been obliged to do — by the use of neologisms and, at times, of elaborate, allusive formulations of words which make considerable demands on the reader if their full meaning and implications are to be grasped.
Gardner lists five ways in which these paranoid tendencies manifest themselves: (1) the pseudo-scientist considers himself a genius and (2) regards his colleagues as ignorant blockheads; (3) he believes himself unjustly persecuted and discriminated against; (4) he focuses his attacks on the greatest scientists and the best - established theories; and (5) he often employs a complex jargon and in many cases coins words and phrases (neologisms) of his own.
I have ventured to use this neologism because it is clear, expressive and convenient; also because it affirms the necessity for incorporating human psychism, Thought, in a true «physics» of the World.)
This European neologism was used in a way that would have struck previous generations as a plain category mistake, designating not actions, but people — and so also with its counterpart and foil «heterosexual.»
Hartshorne's achievement is the less original, for the creator of new language, so long as he is not using barbarisms or neologisms for the sake of it, is the one who enables language to do more in its quest to grasp symbolically the universe in which we do our thinking.
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 tournament.
[17] The verb «to democratise» made its appearance precisely in these years; Vacherot uses it in La démocratie, taking care to excuse the neologism: «it is possible to democratise (if we excuse the barbarism)», Ibid., p. 272.
And yet, bad and down as Alan is, it is possible that this neologism is less an authentic representation of contemporary slang than the work of those who want to take him down (in the polls, of course).
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?»
Like the transistor, this development also involved a neologism: the word bit, chosen in this case not by a committee but by the lone author, a 32 - year - old named Claude Shannon.
His films make powerful use of the landscape of his home terrain, the Aveyron and Tarn province in southwest France, and they play outrageously with language, deliberately provoking incomprehension with wordplay, bizarre neologisms, and exotic character names.
Words can be real or neologisms (words that make sense according to word parts, but they are not real words found in the dictionary).
Book and ebook titles based on neologisms create a type of «shorthand» that instantly communicates what a book is about in a unique, memorable way.
Gaming neologisms aren't a recent development, either; plenty of games have thrown meaning to the wind in favor of chic - sounding idioms.
As the neologism «standart» suggests, he was continually pointing toward the possibility of a generic painting — not attempting to realize this idea so much as to allegorize it, most overtly in such works as Untitled (System Painting), 1966.
10 As I've noted elsewhere, Rauschenberg's neologism window plane — in its combination of the pictorial transparency associated with a window pane and the flat opacity of the modernist picture plane — is a particularly concise and appropriate designation of his concerns.11
The tangled object invokes a disruption in communication or possibly access to new neologisms.
At first I thought it must be some kind of Dadaist event, an exhibition devoted to Arp and his notional family — because to a German - speaker, the word «Artschwager «could be construed as a bilingual neologism, a combination of the English word «art» and the German word «Schwager `, or in - laws.
Her current research is centered in the emergence of neologisms, shifting meanings, subjectivity, and the power of popular culture.
«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.
Neologisms are good salt and pepper in a text if they season something other than themselves, but what is being pointed to with the silly «post-internet?»
1 Doublespeak seems a neologism neocons should embrace, as Leo Strauss's acolytes were already practicing it in 1984.
If you don't have $ $ to invest in building all the connotations and associations do not use neologisms.
In the manner of the delusionists, I think this affair requires a neologism.
Proctor, a professor of the history of science at Stanford, is one of the world's leading experts in agnotology, a neologism signifying the study of the cultural production of ignorance.
The neologism entered the OED in 1993.
Laval law professor Mario Naccarato, in his paper «Of Couch Potatoes and Lexicographers: The Eternal Struggle Between Usage and the Imposed Neologism, and its Application to Legal Neology», 39 Rev Gen 229, talks some about neology and law.
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.
In Woe is I, Patricia T. O'Conner calls these neologisms «clunky.»
It's hard enough to shift to the neologism of the day in everyday speech, but imagine it in legislation!
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.
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