A clear analysis of how linguistic patterns impact norms, neologisms, and register, with practical examples and readability ...
https://doi.org/10.5325/korelangamer.23.2.0198 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/korelangamer.23.2.0198 Copy URL ABSTRACT: Neologism has become one of the most ...
Social media neologisms are assimilating into our language and sharpening our evolving human communication. The Millennial generation is passing, making way for Gen Z, the new generation composed of ...
Neologism means a newly created word or phrase in language. New words like selfie, influencer show language evolving Some neologisms fade; others become dictionary entries. Did our AI summary help?
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The word “feminist” is now 150 years old, I was surprised to learn recently. Its sesquicentennial arises from 1873, when Alexander Dumas first used it in print, and then apologised to readers who didn ...
(FIJ-ih-tul). adj. Excessively checking one’s devices. Example: “Victoria grew tired of watching her figital fiancé glance at his iPhone every five seconds.” (TIE-runt), n. Child who bosses everyone ...
The bewildering stream of new words to describe technology and its uses makes many people angry, but there's much to celebrate, writes Tom Chatfield. From agriculture to automobiles to autocorrect, ...
It’s fun to make up new words (technically neologisms), especially nonsensical ones, which can be characterized as balderdash, bushwa, claptrap, codswallop ...