So, we'll have to wait and see just what
the actual name of the car is.
Not exact matches
This generally pernicious and counterintuitive trend (facts are more easily accessed than ever) arrives just in time to offer comfort to those responsible for another irritating affront to the public's intelligence, one that's been creeping up in the world
of cars for decades but which seems to have finally fully flowered — the willingness
of carmakers to abandon the
actual facts in favor
of pseudofacts when
naming their models.
He forgot the
name of the defining feature
of the Faraday Future brand
of design, which is apparently the only hint
of the
actual car we got from CES, besides a platform that didn't work and we couldn't actually see.