neologist การใช้
- Would-be neologists will have to keep tinkering with those pronouns for a while yet.
- Although English has no committee or academy or board that reviews new words for suitability, there are a few loose guidelines that will help you become a successful neologist.
- Given the unlikelihood that Suetonius bandied words like " doo-wop " or " megaton, " our Finnish Latinists must be busy neologists as well as stalwart grammarians.
- To France we go again for esprit de l'escalier, the " spirit of the staircase . " ( Neologists have also proposed stairwit and retrotort for this phenomenon .)
- John Algeo, the neologist of American Speech, points to the two-way working of the metaphor : " If one thinks that the top of the hill is the place to be, then
- His multifaceted personality makes a classical classification of his work difficult, so Ehrenberg has defined himself as a " neologist " since the seventies; the term itself is a neologism which underlines the experimental characteristics of his work.
- I believe what I believe is right . " Let us now ponder the oratory eccentricities of President George W . Bush, whom Metcalf calls the " Blunderer-in-Chief . " Bush, he says, is a " neologist, " or an inventor of words.
- If you've ever heard yourself saying, " He was, I don't know, squidgeral, " or thought, " I wish there were a word for ` needing more than two hands to operate, "'you are probably a closet neologist.
- Han is the author of sixteen books, of which the most recent are treatises on what he terms a " society of tiredness " ( " M黡igkeitsgesellschaft " ), a " society of transparency " ( " Transparenzgesellschaft " ), and on his neologist concept of " shanzai ", which seeks to identify modes of deconstruction in contemporary practices of Chinese capitalism.
- In fact, the power of his books, coupled with the widespread disillusionment about the political elite turned public attention to the lower classes and peasantry, as better heirs and keepers of real Hungarian legacy . ( The neologists of the first half of the 19th century had turned towards folklore, myths, ballads and tales in their search of a new national literary style, but had not had interest in other aspects of rural peasant life .)