As in most descriptions of horrific events, new phrases are used to bureaucratize or euphemize them. |
|
To call a restroom a lounge is to euphemize euphemism, to touch up the painting of the lily. |
|
It is, certainly, not only denizens of the left who theorize and euphemize their way out of inconvenient situations. |
|
Does literature euphemize the brute if indeterminate fact of founding violence, a process the Shakespearean text demystifies? |
|
The falling, dropping, crumpling that euphemize killing in Fick's memoir threaten to weaken the violence of war as wrote. |
|
That's the term Corporate America coined to euphemize actions that result in workers losing their jobs. |
|
There seems to be some support here for the claim that the older group felt a greater need to euphemize in the two contexts in question. |
|
Like their Northern counterparts, the histories of African Americans and of slavery in Connecticut neglect and euphemize slavery after the enactment of gradual abolition. |
|
Believe this effort to euphemize political malfeasance is overly generous. |
|