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| | Neologism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The early modern English prose writings of Sir Thomas Browne 1605-1682 are the source of many neologisms as recorded by the OED. |  | | Sometimes the title of the book will become the neologism. |  | | Most commonly, they are simply taken from a word used in the narrative of a book; for instance, McJob from Douglas Coupland's Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture and cyberspace from William Gibson's Neuromancer. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neologism
(1272 words)
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| | Neologism Cliche Aphorism and Novel Language Form |
 | | This page provides several thousand novel clichés and neologisms, speech figures derived principally from the various poetic forms relevant to the UK usage of the English language - although there is inevitably overlap with the forms adopted by the overseas cousins. |  | | This may mean learning a few of the forms by heart if oral use is intended (but the learning is easy owing to general structure and familiarity of the underlying forms, which act as familiar 'carriers' for the overlayed neologisms). |  | | Changing meaning changes relationship with actuality as don Juan advises his bemused apprentice: 'the world we think we see is only a view, a description of the world...' [Castaneda: "Tales of Power."] |
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http://www.angelfire.com/nd/danscorpio/word4.html
(956 words)
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| | Neologism - OneLook Dictionary Search |
 | | Neologism : Glossary of Literary Terms [home, info] |  | | Neologism : Glossary of English Grammar Terms [home, info] |  | | neologism : Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition [home, info] |
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http://www.onelook.com/?w=Neologism&ls=a
(261 words)
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| | Neologisms. Fowler, H. W. 1908. The King's English |
 | | Prime Minister, Cabinet, His Majesty's Opposition, have been neologisms of this kind in their day, all standing for particular developments of the party system, and all of them, probably, in more or less general use before they made their way into books. |  | | It is already familiar to all who give any time to observing continental politics, though the Index to the Encyclopaedia (1903) knows it not. |  | | Among other arts and sciences, that of lexicography happens to have found convenient a neologism that may here be used to help in the very slight classification required for the new words we are more concerned withthat is, those whose object is literary or general, and not scientific. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/116/103.html
(1543 words)
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| | Trasumanar (neologism) |
 | | Claiming that his ascent from the Terrestrial Paradise to the celestial realm of the blessed cannot be expressed adequately in words, Dante invents the word trasumanar ("to transhumanize, to pass beyond the human"), the first of many neologisms in the Paradiso. |  | | He compares the internal transformation he undergoes during this ascent to the change experienced by Glaucus, a fisherman-turned-god whose story contains several parallels with Dante's journey. |  | | He observed that the fish he caught became animated as soon as they touched the grass and that they then escaped en masse back into the water. |
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http://danteworlds.laits.utexas.edu/textpopup/par0101.html
(115 words)
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| | Past Neologisms of the Week |
 | | Created by Chris Clegg by reading aloud from a German recipe book and anglicising the pronounciation. |  | | Derived from librarian with -esque suffix to make the adjective form. |  | | Does making up real words make me more clever?" |
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http://uk.geocities.com/neologismoftheweek/past.html
(2199 words)
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| | Nonce-word Pragmatics - Louis Cabri |
 | | A neologism exists only during the passage from unofficial everyday usage to officially-designated new word of a particular language. |  | | The neologism recruits, with every new dictionary addition, for the word as such – which here must be understood as itself having an instrumental function that might not have been perceived by modernist poets who claimed the word-as-such as a poetic liberation from instrumentality. |  | | A new word or phrase, or a new use of a word. |
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http://www.monoecious.org/cabri-nonce.html
(1306 words)
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| | Podcasting, now that is a Neologism - Today's Podcast by Scott Brenner. |
 | | The second meaning for neologism is the act of inventing a new word. |  | | For example, the MBA types frequently use the word learnings to describe observations or conclusions since learnings isn't a dictionary word they are unknowingly engaging in neologism. |  | | Yesterday's word got me to thinking and reading about word creation and where new words come from. |
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http://todayspodcast.com/archives/2004/12/podcasting_now_1.html
(243 words)
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| | neologism - General Practice Notebook |
 | | The use of a neologism does not necessarily indicate a thought disorder. |  | | A neologism is a word or phrase invented by an individual. |  | | The examiner must write a putative neologism down once the patient has said it and then ask the patient what that word means. |
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http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/cache/436600843.htm
(125 words)
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| | Dictionary.com/neologism |
 | | neologism was Word of the Day on November 18, 2000. |
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http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=neologism
(145 words)
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| | Folksonomy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Folk taxonomies are culturally supplied, intergenerationally transmitted, and relatively stable classification systems that people in a given culture use to make sense of the entire world around them (not just the Internet). |  | | The term folksonomy is a neologism or Portmanteau word that specifically refers to the tagging systems created within Internet communities. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folksonomy
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| | Technorati Tag: Neologism |
 | | Neologism is a new word idea February 2nd, 2006 Heard of neologism? |  | | This page shows blog posts, photos, and links that have been tagged Neologism. |  | | on 11/04/2006@ 15:41 Filed under: English 2.0 ValleyWag has a contest going to craft a neologism. |
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http://www.technorati.com/tag/Neologism
(346 words)
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| | Tag Central » neologism |
 | | Dictionary citation for aaargh plop from Double-Tongued Word Wrester Dictionary |  | | The only thing google can turn up is that someone has bought the domain names shopulent.com/org/net, but otherwise, there's no mention of the word anywhere on google, so I had to stake my claim. |  | | An error occurred retrieving or processing the feed. |
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http://tagcentral.net/?tag=neologism&submit=Get+Tag
(183 words)
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| | neologism Search Results - Shadows.com |
 | | Tags: lgbt - hoyay - words - neologism - more >> |  | | cool dictionaries dictionary english funny hoyay lgbt links my neologisms netspeak reference slang sniglets social wordplay words writing |  | | Click on additional terms to narrow your search: |
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http://www.shadows.com/tags/neologism
(149 words)
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| | Neologism Competition: Bob Levey |
 | | First prize, by the way, is lunch with the columnist himself. |  | | Bob Levey has been running his monthly neologism competition since 1983. |  | | Do you know anyone else who would enjoy this? |
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http://www.fun-with-words.com/neologisms_competition.html
(206 words)
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| | slacktivist: Neologism |
 | | There may be at least one other definition. |  | | Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Neologism: |
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http://slacktivist.typepad.com/slacktivist/2005/12/neologism.html
(1096 words)
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| | ~neoLogism~ - ICQ.com |
 | | About Me ~neoLogism~ did not enter a description. |
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http://www.icq.com/whitepages/about_me.php?uin=274614142&action=message
(16 words)
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| | the-deblog.com |
 | | Awful business, but the one bright light was a neologism I ran across in someone's essay--simple, sensible, someone should have thought of it long since: outquick. |  | | Posted by Debra Hamel @ 10:44 AM Okay, folks. |  | | Posted by Debra Hamel @ 1:18 PM Finally finished grading a batch of exams I had to wade through. |
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http://the-deblog.blogspot.com/2005_12_01_the-deblog_archive.html
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| | Block That Neologism! TPMCafe |
 | | What a moron Lowry is. He doesn't even seem to realize that "Neorealist" is a term that already exists...how can you coin a neologism that already exists? |  | | On February 10, 2006 - 12:24am jlkenney said: |  | | On February 10, 2006 - 4:26am Taylor Owen said: |
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http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/26480
(831 words)
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