Stylistically, the language was riddled with neologisms and foreign terms, and the composition was muddled by excessive ornaments. |
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Yet, many neologisms sneak in unnoticed and many exist for some time, only later to attract adverse attention. |
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Mr Rowan said neologisms were often invented by certain groups to make themselves feel exclusive. |
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I wouldn't call them neologisms because a neologism is a new word that has immediate definition or sense. |
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You will appreciate that I spend much of my time reading the newspapers in order to turn up neologisms and other interesting terms. |
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His work routinely exhibits a Joycean verbal playfulness and exuberance, and is littered with inventive neologisms and mixed metaphors. |
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Decode the neologisms and euphemisms and you gain a rare insight into the strategists' true intentions. |
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Homeric glosses, along with scholarly neologisms and obscure periphrases, are prominent in his poetry. |
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Vauban never spared himself during the process, and was always on hand, muttering away in a Burgundian dialect littered with forceful neologisms. |
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I was imagining a full hybridized America in the 21st century and trying to coin all these neologisms to explain what America would look like. |
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He chose antiquated vocabulary, from religious literature and classical poetry, and avoided neologisms. |
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In addition, a number of neologisms and new notions which resulted from the harmonization process are discussed. |
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Happy is the terminologist who can use neologisms, borrowed words and jargon to solve a problem in the booth! |
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But if you dress up the idea in a forbidding vocabulary, full of neologisms and recondite references to philosophy, then you may have a prescription for academic stardom. |
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The formation of neologisms is a natural process that no amount of outrage can halt. |
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Whether one prefers to call this a function or an exaptation is a terminological issue perhaps to be settled by one's taste for neologisms. |
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Politicians invent neologisms and use words in a very imaginative way. |
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Some were recovered from pre-revolutionary Russian, others were neologisms. |
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The Telegraph reports on the publication of a new dictionary of Italian neologisms, which includes dozens of coinages based on the names of political leaders. |
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This workshop will teach translators and other French language professionals how to decipher the meaning of neologisms. |
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Learn about some interesting English neologisms and two bizarre-to say the least-punctuation marks. |
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In January 1968, the Centre started publishing Terminology Update, a journal that identified neologisms, proposed solutions to terminology problems and, generally, informed translators about language and terminology news. |
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We have had bioethics, biomedicine, a fair few neologisms and pleonastic expressions, and now we have biotechnology, or the technological exploitation of living processes, with all the artificiality that this entails. |
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Problematic prepositions, unfortunate neologisms, split infinitives and misplaced modifiers constantly startle the reader. |
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The style was characterised by long, convoluted sentences and a predilection for rare words and neologisms. |
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All of them are lexically dependent on Dutch rather than German for neologisms. |
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In the process of language formation, neologisms are more mature than protologisms. |
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The law, governmental bodies, and technology have a relatively high frequency of acquiring neologisms. |
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Because neologisms originate in one language, translations between languages can be difficult. |
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This way, translators are able to use potential translated neologisms in sentences and test them with different structures and syntax. |
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Use of neologisms may also be related to aphasia acquired after brain damage resulting from a stroke or head injury. |
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Adopting American English, he used wordplay, neologisms, elliptical phrases, and alliteration. |
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Read any university prospectus or graduate yearbook and you soon discover a brave new world of neologisms. |
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Thus various ugly neologisms which I find especially annoying have emerged in recent years from the USA into common usage. |
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Each essay is sub-divided into numerically marked sections and is written in a business-oriented argot of acronyms and neologisms. |
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Both words seem to be neologisms, and I would be tempted to obelize.I would prefer to obelize Linos or else to read hos. |
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The air of CGI is thick with the miasma of biz-school neologisms. |
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France has two: the Académie Française and a separate committee, reporting directly to the prime minister, that monitors businesses and other organisations for neologisms, especially ones imported from English. |
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But that rule was written a decade ago, when neither company had begun its service, and years before iPods, podcasts and other neologisms had battled their way into the English vocabulary. |
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They have a wide range of words to denote one and the same thing and a multitude of expressions to describe one and the same feeling, as well as many mechanisms for creating neologisms. |
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Approximately half of the Inuktitut equivalents are neologisms. |
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This experience has quite naturally resulted in a certain number of neologisms and new concepts and in the development of new research and harmonization techniques. |
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Rarely, the use of unusual suffixed forms to create neologisms occurs. |
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Like all cyberpunk work, it contains imaginative neologisms. |
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It included many Latinate neologisms, as well as obsolete words already dropped from popular usage so completely that their meanings were no longer understood. |
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Levinas seems to be offering new words or newly burnished words for old, those apparent semantic neologisms are more like pre-semantic paleologisms. |
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The words in Figure 3 contain no contrived examples, no questionable neologisms, no regionalisms and no disyllables trying to pass themselves off as monosyllables. |
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Neologisms may be justified, and a revolutionary theory may require multiple neologisms, but when they are used they should be sufficiently clear. |
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Many old words which had fallen into disuse were recycled and given new senses in the modern language, and neologisms were created from Old Norse roots. |
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Neologisms stabilize as English is made to adapt to local sociopolitical and cultural practices. |
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Neologisms are distinct from a person's idiolect, one's unique patterns of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. |
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Neologisms can also originate entirely online from social media and other forms of internet media. |
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Neologisms are often directly attributable to a specific person, publication, period, or event. |
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Neologisms also can be created through abbreviation or acronym, by intentionally rhyming with existing words or simply through playing with sounds. |
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Neologisms may come from a word used in the narrative of a book. |
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