Sentences with phrase «neologisms for»

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.
Havmor is a neologism for «have more» which means the customer gets more value for money and more taste to relish from...

Not exact matches

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.
«Freemium» may be an ugly neologism, but the practice of giving something away and then selling a premium version of that product has been part of the Dead's practice for decades.
Still, Bush's mispronunciations, for example of «nuclear,» and his neologisms, like «misunderestimate,» became the constant fare of late - night comedians.
See The Letters of George Santayana (326) for Santayana's criticism of Whitehead's unnecessary neologism.
Few settled to call Sandy an immense storm, instead opting for «superstorm,» and while calling her a composite storm would prove unwieldy, the «Frankenstorm» neologism sounded equally outlandish.
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.)
Great episcopal figures of the antebellum period — for example, the Irish liberal John England of Charleston, and the pugnacious John Hughes of New York — were «fitted» into the Carrollingian story line (if I may be pardoned the neologism) even as their distinctive styles and the accomplishments of their episcopates stretched the boundaries of the «Carroll Church.»
It is early days for the coalition, but the coupling of David Cameron and Nick Clegg is already giving birth to a little brood of neologisms.
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.
A grotesque neologism, the title of «Dereconstruction,» Matthew Higgs's recent curatorial effort for Gladstone Gallery, was — according to the catalogue essay — both «a hybrid term, one that conflates notions of «construction,» «reconstruction,» «deconstruction,» and «destruction,»» and a reference to «The New Reconstructions,» Pace Gallery's 1979 exhibition of work by Lucas Samaras.
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.
Besides any other criticism of this neologism, the case for (or against) gun control is anything but obvious.
Person - ending nouns are neologisms — which is a fancy term for made - up words.
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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