neologism in English

noun
1
a newly coined word or expression.
His work routinely exhibits a Joycean verbal playfulness and exuberance, and is littered with inventive neologisms and mixed metaphors.
synonyms:new wordnew expressionnew termnew phrasecoinagemade-up wordnonce word
noun

Use "neologism" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "neologism" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "neologism", or refer to the context using the word "neologism" in the English Dictionary.

1. Boomburb meaning (neologism) A rapidly expanding suburb.

2. A dynamic attitude toward neologism is desirable.

3. She caught up a popular neologism from the newspapers.

4. Boomburb is a neologism principally promoted by American Robert E

5. This article approaches neologism from the angle of semantic extension.

6. He caught up a popular neologism from the newspapers.

7. The newspaper used the neologism "dinks", Double Income No Kids.

8. There should be two kinds of neologism dictionaries: the timely ones and the stable ones.

9. The novel displayed Rolfe's fondness for neologism, verbal sumptuousness, and quirky spelling in its best light.

10. Coopetition or co-opetition is a neologism coined to describe the concept of cooperation between competitors

11. 25 The novel displayed Rolfe's fondness for neologism, verbal sumptuousness, and quirky spelling in its best light.

12. As neologism or Coinage, we identify the word formation process of inventing entirely new words (neology)

13. Scientific neologism is itself just linguistic evolution gone self - conscious, as science is self - conscious common sense.

14. Acronym: A neologism created from the first letter of the each of the words in a particular phrase

15. So the word is a relative neologism, and therefore lends itself easily to personal interpretations, for good or ill.

16. 10 The novel displayed Rolfe's fondness for neologism, verbal sumptuousness, and quirky spelling in its best light.

17. (2010) proposed the Greek-inspired neologism Astycene -from the Greek words for city (asty, αστυ) and new (cene, καινoς)

18. A word whose development stage is between that of the protologism (freshly Coined) and neologism (new word) is a prelogism

19. Acronym Vox populi A neologism created from the first letter of the each of the words in a particular phrase

20. The earliest known reference to the word Backronym in print was in a November 1983 edition of the Washington Post monthly neologism contest

21. We can take the changes of society as the basis, semantic extension and pragmatic extension as the approach and the emergence of neologism as the result.

22. Boomburb is a neologism for a large, rapidly growing city that remains essentially suburban in character even as it reaches populations more typical of urban core cities

23. Allistic Neurotypical or NT, an abbreviation of neurologically typical, is a neologism widely used in the autistic community as a label for people who are not on the autism spectrum.

24. For example, "Sainsbury, who had Choron translated into English in 1825, rendered the first occurrence of tonalité as a 'system of modes' before matching it with the neologism 'tonality'.

25. Bolos m (plural Bolos) (neologism, slang, derogatory) black market customer; customer to a drug dealer; a person that can be scammed or ripped off; a lame person, a fool; Further reading

26. Against the backdrop of its postmodernist theoretical accents and inflections--and as the titular neologism, Caribbeing, succinctly announces--it both denotes and Betokens rather an existential condition or generic experience transcending the limits and confines of any locale.

27. The Basques are kent in the local leids as: Euskaldunak ("Basque speakers", uised loosely tae descrive aw ethnic Basques), euskal herritarrak ("natives o the Basque Kintra") or euskotarrak ("natives of the Basque Kintra", an aften mentioned but rarely uised neologism) in Basque

28. Pronoia is a neologism coined to describe a state of mind that is the opposite of paranoia.Whereas a person suffering from paranoia feels that persons or entities are Conspiring against them, a person experiencing pronoia feels that the world around them conspires to do them good.