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 ...
(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 ...
Google's lawyers don't like it, but the search engine's name has become a generonym, a brand name that people use as a generic word for searching. The word Google itself is a neologism, a variation on ...
All right class. Tablets open, pencils ready? Today’s lesson is on “Neologisms.” As a one-time teacher of plane geometry (nothing fancy), you might expect that subject to be a new way of looking at ...
From the Southern Metropolis Weekly, 2009-12-25, translated by CDT’s E. Shih: The “swine” flu that continues taking lives and the “kitty cat” hide-and-seek game of truth; the widely castigated law ...
Please note that the posts on The Blogs are contributed by third parties. The opinions, facts and any media content in them are presented solely by the authors, and neither The Times of Israel nor its ...
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 ...
Wow, when Jeff Contompasis suggested that this year’s Tour de Fours letter block be “UNDO,” I knew it was a timely idea, but I didn’t realize how swiftly it would happen: Joe Biden hardly had time to ...
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 ...
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