So I have this term I coined called gender capitalism.
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DC: I think Graydon coined that term in Spy magazine.
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He also coined the term "The Reagan Doctrine," among others.
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He coined the phrase special relationship and offer this advice.
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Screenwriter William Goldman essentially coined the phrase for the movie.
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So what did Twitter think of Trump's newly coined description?
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My grandfather coined "the silent world," but it's the opposite.
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" There has been a term coined for this backlash: "vegaphobia.
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It was actually coined in 2015 by Ole Martin Moen.
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As goes the phrase Christian Fuchs coined: no fuchs given.
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Martin Mugar coined "Zombie Formalism" and framed the phenomenon philosophically.
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Coined by writers in the 1930s, it became popular during
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" To explain this phenomenon, she coined the phrase "white fragility.
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We coined something called New Collar Skills of the Future.
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The term "millennial pink" was coined around the same time.
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Thirty years later, the name chronic fatigue syndrome was coined.
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The country has even coined a word for the phenomenon.
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" Williams continued, "But he coined a phrase that's 'Anima animus.
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The Stone The term "utopia" was coined 500 years ago.
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The "war on drugs" was coined by President Richard Nixon.
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The word the twentieth century coined for that was totalitarianism.
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" Underwood was the one who coined the nickname "Tic Tac.
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The acronym, coined in the early 1990s, is pedagogical vapor.
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Snappy, alliterative, essentially true — President Trump had coined another one.
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I've unexpectedly coined the term Big Emotion in this book.
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Some parts of speech acquire newly coined words all the time.
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THE phrase "concrete jungle" might have been coined for São Paulo.
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Mindhunter introduced us to the people who first coined the term.
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The screensaver was created and coined by software developer John Socha.
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That's been called the "girther" movement, coined by MSNBC's Chris Hayes.
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Biles also coined a now-famous catch phrase on the show.
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The cops had to deal with it and coined the term.
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It was a pithy product name coined by Infogear in 1998.
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But the term itself wasn't actually coined until the mid-'70s.
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Don't even (bleeping) put me ... closer wasn't even a coined phrase.
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Richard Spencer coined the term "alt-right" for his own movement.
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Paget coined the phrase "seed and soil" to describe the phenomenon.
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I actually think I coined this, in terms of the change.
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And then Ms. O'Brien coined the hashtag #EpiGate, and it stuck.
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Who was it that needed this word first and coined it?
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"Wreckage rider" is a term coined by amateur historian Jim Hamilton.
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Irvin S. Taubkin, The Times's promotion manager, coined the memorable phrase.
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Here's his amazing costume, coined on Reddit as Vincent van Glow.
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The Swedes have even coined a word for flying shame: flygskam.
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Not trademarking "nonprime", which he thinks he coined five years ago.
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"Todd has coined a phrase here: idiosyncratic business," said Stannard-Stockton.
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Barely a decade old, Green Monday was first coined by eBay.
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It was a Rainbow Coalition before the term was even coined.
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That's because Kateman and his friend Tyler Alterman coined the phrase.
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It really hadn't been coined as a term at that point.
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The psychiatrist who coined the term says this paranoia evolves with technology.
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The phrase was coined by the Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in 1970.
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Did you Google "Donald Drumpf" after John Oliver coined his new nickname?
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Fury is the self-proclaimed "Gypsy King," coined from his traveler background.
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Keke Palmer is ready to take a new joke she's coined mainstream.
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One viewer even coined the term "sexposition" to describe the gratuitous nudity.
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Adjectives, nouns and verbs are "open": they can be coined at will.
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Adapting a term coined by a Dutch writer, we call it "slowbalisation".
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He coined immortal phrases such as "radical chic" and "the me decade".
|
|
The SPLC calls the newly-coined movement a "derivative" of Identity Evropa.
|
|
Iconic sex writer Dan Savage coined the term "monogamish" in his column.
|
|
She actually coined the term "bug" in reference to a computer malfunction.
|
|
The term "blue moon" was coined to describe the extra full moons.
|
|
We coined a term called "the Man Box" to illustrate these teachings.
|
|
The cops had to deal with it all and coined the term.
|
|
It was a libertarian activist, Sam Konkin, who coined the word 'Kochtopus.
|
|
The phrase "all killer, no filler" was coined for records like this.
|
|
Researchers coined a name for this: It's called the credit card premium.
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|
"I don't know who coined 'Kate's Law,'" Jim Steinle told the Chronicle.
|
|
That's why I coined the acronym FOBLO: Fear Of Being Left Out.
|
|
"We probably should have coined it as the AIQ Bowl," he said.
|
|
That evolved into hiplet, a term that Mr. Bryant coined in 2009.
|
|
The term was coined in 2014 by Sarah Stankorb in Good Magazine.
|
|
The word "Friendsgiving" wasn't coined until around 2007, according to Merriam-Webster.
|
|
So Grinsted coined a new metric: "area of total destruction," or ATD.
|
|
Dr. Robin DiAngelo coined a term to describe this phenomenon: white fragility.
|
|
That EP was the sound which coined the phrase 'progressive hip-hop'.
|
|
He coined the term "editor at large" for a very inventive reason.
|
|
Reporters coined the term "Jacindamania" to describe the fervor of her supporters.
|
|
The term was coined by Metro UK writer Ellen Scott last year.
|
|
But the exact game in which the phrase was coined is unclear.
|
|
The legal term coined for it — 'insanity'— remains in common use today.
|
|
THE phrase "prehistoric monster" might have been coined with sea spiders in mind.
|
|
Together, they have been coined "neglected" for the lack of attention they receive.
|
|
The Cosmic Web is a term coined by scientists to describe Cosma's structure.
|
|
Even the word "tweet" was coined by Twitterific before Twitter adopted the term.
|
|
She's the kind of actress for whom the term "movie star" was coined.
|
|
And this historian, Alexei Yurchak, coined the phrase "HyperNormalisation" to describe that feeling.
|
|
It's got the dial (Apple coined it a crown), and the distinctive back.
|
|
One newspaper has even coined a word for the hysteria he generates: Princedemonia.
|
|
Deng Xiaoping coined the clunky term "socialism with Chinese characteristics" in the 1980s.
|
|
The imported term for sexual harassment, seku-hara, was coined only in 1989.
|
|
Michael Hartnett, BofAML's chief investment strategist, coined the "Great Rotation" term in 2010.
|
|
So, I think -- I coined the phrase everyone has the right to relief.
|
|
Have you ever heard of Shine Theory (coincidentally also coined on The Cut)?
|
|
By 1841, when Owen coined the term "dinosaur", extinction was an accepted fact.
|
|
They've coined it 'the Black Power kitchen'—for me, that says it all.
|
|
Professor Harold Haas helped develop the technology and coined the term li-fi.
|
|
This is ironic because Valls himself coined a now infamous phrase in French
|
|
Growth mindset, a term coined by social psychologist Carol Dweck, encompasses precisely that.
|
|
True to tech, we've coined a new term, with a twist: insourced development.
|
|
They've also coined some nicknames for their daughter, including Lulu and Looney Tunes.
|
|
Ukrainian émigré publications coined a new word to describe its barbarity: "Holodomor," a
|
|
In fact, I coined the term "compose" that Ellis cited in federal court.
|
|
Actually, "youthquake" dates from 1965, when it was coined by the fashion industry.
|
|
Dr. Paine coined a term to describe the starfish's outsize influence: keystone species.
|
|
Meanwhile, the "resistance economy" -- a term coined by Khamenei -- is seeing a resurgence.
|
|
Eurogamer even coined a new term for it: top down fuck-em-up.
|
|
"This is what White called 'emplotment,' a term he coined," Dr. Doran continued.
|
|
Few people have ever coined more words that subsequently came to be used.
|
|
A third place is a term coined by a sociologist named Ray Oldenberg.
|
|
It was coined by Rex Parker, and is based on the Massachusetts town.
|
|
" DePaul professor Sumi Cho coined a term for this conservative tactic: "racial mascotting.
|
|
I guess they coined it that name and we were like, 'Okay, cool.
|
|
So yeah, hot mom and mamah muda were coined to perpetuate male fantasies.
|
|
The former was first referred to in 1915, coined after the Armenian genocide.
|
|
That term, coined by Trump's National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, is a fallacy.
|
|
Take the Marshall Plan: America is the country that coined the term pragmatism.
|
|
First coined in 1936, "light field" is meant to call to mind magnetic fields.
|
|
The term was originally coined by Sarah Stankorb for Good in a 2014 feature.
|
|
This is a basic tablet running a customized version of Android (coined Fire OS).
|
|
Base coined the term "blanding," but the international branding agency is anything but boring.
|
|
This tactic was so powerful that people coined the phrase "vaporware" to describe it.
|
|
JOSEPH NYE, an American political scientist, first coined the term "soft power" in 1990.
|
|
The phrase "uncanny valley" was coined in 1970 by the Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori.
|
|
In the past decade we even coined a new word for this phenomenon: 'Clickbait'.
|
|
He did however, disavow political divisiveness and deride what he coined backward looking policies.
|
|
Jeb Bush may forever be remembered for the "low energy" moniker the billionaire coined.
|
|
She coined the term, and she meant a really specific thing that I support.
|
|
The BRIC acronym was coined by Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O'Neill in 2001.
|
|
The term was first coined in 2010, but the popularity has exploded since then.
|
|
Missy's legacy has been a shining example of Afrofuturism since the term was coined.
|
|
Well, according to Conway, who famously coined the term "alternative facts," sure it is.
|
|
Harris coined a series of phrases that became so popular they morphed into cliché.
|
|
The term "General Frost" was coined in recognition of the power of cold weather.
|
|
Uppercase "Internet" also reflected a common tendency to capitalize newly coined or unfamiliar terms.
|
|
The term "smize" was coined on Tyra Banks' television show, America's Next Top Model.
|
|
And unlike Theodore Roosevelt, who coined that term, Mr. Trump probably wouldn't speak softly.
|
|
"On-demand" is a term coined by conservatives to further stoke an emotional response.
|
|
The term bond vigilante was coined by market historian Ed Yardeni in the 1980s.
|
|
IBM has had a stake in Silicon Valley before the name was even coined.
|
|
The hashtag, coined by writer and activist Leslie Mac, accompanied tweets from Democratic Reps.
|
|
The term "war games" was also a term coined by China and North Korea.
|
|
We incorporated more humor and coined the term "splatstick," where it's horror and comedy.
|
|
Harry and Draco, coined 'Drarry' by their readership are apparently one spicy, spicy dish.
|
|
One therapist has coined fatigue from the 24/7 news cycle 'headline stress disorder.
|
|
The Japanese have even coined a term, "on-nomi," for drinking online with friends.
|
|
It was Mr. Orban who coined the phrase "illiberal democracy" to describe his government.
|
|
The name was coined by gold-seekers who passed through in 21846 and 21880.
|
|
Winston Churchill coined the term "special relationship" in a 1946 speech in Fulton, Missouri.
|
|
At that point in time, the concept, the idea of SARS wasn't even coined.
|
|
Gold and his brother, Ian, coined the term the "Truman Show delusion" in 2008.
|
|
He coined the term agency theory, which has been instrumental in finance and economics.
|
|
The psychiatrist who coined the term says this paranoia is evolving as technology changes.
|
|
He coined the phrase "Make our planet great again," lampooning Mr. Trump's campaign slogan.
|
|
He also claimed to have coined the term "trust strategists" for public relations professionals.
|
|
But the political use of the term "witch hunt" wasn't necessarily coined by Trump.
|
|
The word "gene" had been coined just two years before Bleuler published his book.
|
|
He's a man for whom a term was coined for copulating with a rodent.
|
|
Look no further than the white nationalist who coined the term alt-right, Richard Spencer.
|
|
APU, if you're unfamiliar, is the AMD-coined term for a CPU with integrated graphics.
|
|
The term helicopter money was first coined by American economist Milton Friedman in the 1960s.
|
|
Yahoo Chat rooms were rife with catfishing long before the internet term was ever coined.
|
|
Seth coined a holiday that would both celebrate and underline his outsider status in Newport.
|
|
The term #MeToo was first coined by Tarana Burke, an activist from New York City.
|
|
The term was coined to describe nonpermanent employees who work on an as-needed basis.
|
|
Since the term "deepfake" was coined, the technology has consistently been used to target women.
|
|
Logan, like his brother Jake who coined the expression "it's everyday bro," created daily vlogs.
|
|
Many trading advice expressions have been coined to describe the dynamics of the stock market.
|
|
People who listen to podcasts at alarmingly fast speeds, also as coined by BuzzFeed News.
|
|
The pair, which were once coined by the press as "Bennifer," began dating in 2002.
|
|
Spencer is a white nationalist who in 2008 coined the name for the alt-right.
|
|
In "1984", George Orwell coined the term "doublethink", the ability to believe two contradictory things.
|
|
Marketers and psychologists have, for years, measured this on what they've coined the connectedness scale.
|
|
In fact, it was coined by Austrian journalist and author Karl-Maria Kertbeny in 1867.
|
|
Sixty-two years ago this summer, Dartmouth professor John McCarthy coined the term artificial intelligence.
|
|
Throughout the movie she has two looks, one of which I coined the Wakanda knots.
|
|
Cruz has bragged about his completion of the "Full Grassley," a term coined after Sen.
|
|
We've even coined the term Glow-bama because, well, just look at him these days.
|
|
But the butterfly effect is technically a meteorological term, coined exactly half a century ago.
|
|
The former first lady coined the phrase "vast right-wing conspiracy" to describe her opponents.
|
|
Researchers coined the term to describe how obesity, human health, and environmental health are related.
|
|
First coined for the study of wolves, the beta animal is subordinate to the alpha.
|
|
"He's a man whom a term was coined for copulating with a rodent," Cruz said.
|
|
In 1688, the Swiss physician Johannes Hofer coined the term "nostalgia" for a new disease.
|
|
The term was coined by psychiatrist and Harvard University professor Chester M. Pierce in 1970.
|
|
Field coined the "Wonderchicken" nickname, owing to its chicken-like beak and its scientific importance.
|
|
One industry investor, Spencer Bogart, coined a term for these businesses: Cash-Flush Business-Light.
|
|
Noble coined the term "Amargosa chaos" to describe the folding and twisting of rock formations.
|
|
Right across the plaza, in the newly coined "Deer District," is the Drink Wisconsinbly Pub.
|
|
In a recently coined joke, an inmate asks the prison librarian to borrow a book.
|
|
ASMR was first coined in 2010 and has since gathered thousands of faithful followers online.
|
|
"We coined a term for this: Metroburb," said Ralph Zucker, the developer behind Bell Works.
|
|
The term was first coined in 2018 by Ruby Warrington in her book "Sober Curious."
|
|
Paul Selden, Director of the Paleontological Institute at the University of Kansas, coined the name.
|
|
He coined a term for what he viewed as obstructionism: prawny imposybilizm, or legal impossibilism.
|
|
In fact, about 50 years ago, a special name for baseball statistics was coined — sabermetrics.
|
|
" He writes: It was during his London period that Alloway coined the term "Pop art.
|
|
A related field, critical posthumanism (a term coined by Jill Didur), also underpinned our thinking.
|
|
By one count, William Shakespeare coined 135 phrases that are still used in modern English.
|
|
This may lie behind the administration's wish to encourage "asset recycling", a term coined in Australia.
|
|
The long answer starts with America's constitutional convention of 1787, where the term "federalism" was coined.
|
|
It belongs to Nourse, who coined a phrase so evocative that it transcends any fictional context.
|
|
I coined that term ten years ago for one of my Tales novels, Michael Tolliver Lives.
|
|
The Columbia University professor who coined the term net neutrality has a lot to answer for.
|
|
Indeed, the acronym was coined by Jim Cramer to refer specifically to large tech high-fliers.
|
|
"Fifth Cinema" is an evolution from "Fourth Cinema," a term coined by indigenous filmmaker Barry Barclay.
|
|
While it is unclear who coined the term "ampuversary," the Amputee Coalition has welcomed the term.
|
|
A small group of vegetarians coined the term "vegan" in 1944, according to the Vegan Society.
|
|
How many times must we be made to feel like quotas, like tokens in coined phrases?
|
|
When his team had coined the phrase three days earlier he had disliked it, he confided.
|
|
But one of the catchiest slogans was actually coined by none other that Hillary Clinton. Whoops!
|
|
Google engineer Alex Russell coined the PWAs term, and they're essentially websites that progressively become apps.
|
|
The name "magic mushrooms" was coined, improbably, by a headline writer in stodgy old Life magazine.
|
|
Known formerly as "Venetian-Brazilian", Dr Massolini and other campaigners coined the new name in 1995.
|
|
The term was coined in 1992 by Ward Cunningham, the programmer who wrote the first wiki.
|
|
DICK SCOTTExeter Boris Johnson mistakes the meaning of Brexchosis, a word he claims to have coined.
|
|
Republicans coined the phrase "war on coal" as a pejorative way to describe Obama's regulatory policies.
|
|
" Adopting a phrase coined by the photographer Allan Sekula, Mr. Weizman terms the practice "counter forensics.
|
|
Has anyone coined "girther" for those who belive the president weighs more than his doctor reports?
|
|
These stories became so common, the act developed a new name coined by Buzzfeed; "coco-nutting".
|
|
Monopsony, a term coined in the 1930s, refers to markets where a single buyer is dominant.
|
|
Coined by the writer Euclides da Cunha, the phrase seems to fit Lula's personality from birth.
|
|
The MacBook Air kicked off the ultrabook trend among laptops before Intel even coined that term.
|
|
There's a reason why the phrase "red tape" was initially coined in conjunction with the agency.
|
|
The "wildland-urban interface" is a dumb, geeky name coined in California in the early 1970s.
|
|
While it is unclear who used the term first, it was not coined by Mr. Lane.
|
|
Neil deGrasse Tyson, director of New York's Hayden Planetarium, first coined the term for the phenomenon.
|
|
This results in much avoidable waste, for which the phrase "roads to nowhere" has been coined.
|
|
According to the Urban Dictionary, the term "sess" was coined and popularized by California marijuana growers.
|
|
What was the role of the writer Lin Yutang, who coined a term for humor: youmo?
|
|
According to the National Institute of Environmental Health Studies, the term was only coined in 2006.
|
|
In 29, black pan-Africanist historian W. E. B. Du Bois coined the term double consciousness.
|
|
Given the challenge of China's traffic, Baidu coined a new term for its system: Level 4+.
|
|
The term "Reagan Democrat" was coined by the Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg in Macomb County, Mich.
|
|
I coined the term to try to capture something important that has evolved in this country.
|
|
Talk about what happened, and how you sort of coined this term, which again, I love.
|
|
That's not to say male models coined logo hoodies, skate shoes, and a pair of headphones.
|
|
This segment of the market existed before the regtech phrase was coined and is long established.
|
|
Older millennials, rejoice: A recently coined term will finally validate your feeling that you don't belong.
|
|
Fear of Conficker — the name was coined by Microsoft programmers combining "con," from the name TrafficConverter.
|
|
"Object journalism" is the phrase he now prefers, as coined by the design writer Rob Walker.
|
|
Another fun indoor fitness idea is "housewalking," a term coined by Hungry Girl founder Lisa Lillien.
|
|
In late 2017, the term "deepfake" was coined on Reddit to refer to AI-manipulated media.
|
|
It's "radical chic," coined by Tom Wolfe as an insult, recharged as an agent for change.
|
|
"The coined phrase is Texans helping Texans, and that's what we're doing," said Senior Master Sgt.
|
|
Chicago writer Kendall came to Twitter fame when she coined the popular hashtag #solidarityisforwhitewomen in 2013.
|
|
" He coined a phrase in reference to some of the coverage of the Knicks: "hate news.
|
|
It's not clear when, exactly, the term peegasm was coined; it's definitely not a medical term.
|
|
So few that investors coined a term "FANG" for the winning quartet of Facebook Inc, Amazon.
|
|
""There&aposs these four biases that I&aposve coined," he said on the podcast "Millennial Investing.
|
|
"Paisley was at the frontier of globalization before the term 'globalization' was coined," Mr. Coughlan said.
|
|
The word was coined by former lawyer Peter Wilding four years before the vote took place.
|
|
And years after the term was coined, there is still disagreement over definitions of impact investing.
|
|
She also coined a special pimple-popping technique called a 'Macgyver cyst punch' in one video.
|
|
The phrase "blood moon" is relatively new, Dr. Krupp said, a term coined by evangelical ministers.
|
|
It's an apt object for a generation that coined a new word for gazing at themselves.
|
|
It is the largest city in the American county where the term "Reagan Democrats" was coined.
|
|
"Everybody in Europe coined that name, because we didn't have a name for it," he recalls.
|
|
In 1891 members of the Kansas Farmers' Alliance supposedly coined the term "populist" to describe their movement.
|
|
Biologist (and noted Islamophobe) Richard Dawkins coined the term "meme" in 1975 book called The Selfish Gene.
|
|
Industry 4.0 is a term coined by German manufacturers for the digitalization and automation of assembly processes.
|
|
The term was coined early in the nineteenth century, so there is nothing new about this strategy.
|
|
Google will imminently declare that they've achieved "quantum supremacy," a term that Preskill himself coined in 2012.
|
|
Trump has long admired Churchill, who coined the phrase the "special relationship" to describe U.S.-British relations.
|
|
No wonder Sullivan—who coined the phrase "form follows function," by the way—ratted out Burnham's crew.
|
|
NutriRECS member Dr. Gordon Guyatt says he coined the term "evidence-based medicine" and helped develop GRADE.
|
|
Psychologist Robert Firestone coined the term "fantasy bond," which describes the illusion of connection with your partner.
|
|
Little wonder that James Wood, a literary critic, coined the term "hysterical realism" to describe "White Teeth".
|
|
Because instead, what you have here is what Alan Dershowitz has coined the criminalization of political differences.
|
|
The grey zone particularly lends itself to hybrid warfare, a term first coined about ten years ago.
|
|
Her "new look," as coined by Vanity Fair, was introduced by the fashion press via Mario Testino.
|
|
When coined in 18th century Italy, the phrase prima donna was straightforward: a lead female opera singer.
|
|
HiPPO, "highest paid person's opinion," a term coined by Avinash Kaushik, is the antithesis of data-drivenness.
|
|
Coined by South African sociologist Stanley Cohen in the 1960s, a moral panic has several key features.
|
|
That British expression "penny-wise and pound-foolish" was probably coined by someone exhausted with a Capricorn.
|
|
We much prefer a popular phrase coined by the French: la petite mort, or the little death.
|
|
Noted scholar and human rights advocate Raphael Lemkin coined the term "genocide" in 1941, citing the Armenians.
|
|
The late PBS reporter Gwen Iffil coined the term "missing white woman syndrome" to describe this phenomenon.
|
|
Eleven calls it the Upside Down and another phrase is coined into our cultural consciousness forever. 11.
|
|
Originally described as "the tingles," the term ASMR was coined in an internet chat room around 2008.
|
|
The term Blue Monday was first coined in 2005 as part of advertising campaign for Sky Travel.
|
|
Perry Farrell coined the term "alternative nation" so we can include Porno for Pyros in here too.
|
|
As noted by Nylon, both Kaling and Pérez coined the phrase "woke style" to describe Kaling's look.
|
|
The term "jaywalking" was coined for the crime of crossing a street where you felt like it.
|
|
After all, health officials that coined it "the white plague" predicted it would be eradicated by 0003.
|
|
SEOUL, South Korea — The term "Koreaphobia" was coined in China and is used with relish in Seoul.
|
|
Germany has a word for it, apparently coined during the 13 World Cup: schlafwagenfussball (sleeping car soccer).
|
|
When the term was coined, it meant that too, only the actual boondocks are in the Philippines.
|
|
Nuclear winter was the term coined to describe what would happen to Earth after a nuclear war.
|
|
On a visit to Calder's studio, Duchamp coined the noun "mobile," and the rest is art history.
|
|
I didn't wear make-up, I didn't wear dresses, and I was forever lovingly coined a 'tomboy'.
|
|
Coined by legal theorist Kimberlé Crenshaw, intersectionality focuses on the unique experience created by overlapping, inseparable identities.
|
|
Several years ago, the GOP coined the phrase "all of the above" when talking about energy sources.
|
|
Enter "deep work," a concept coined by one of my favorite thinkers in this space, Cal Newport.
|
|
"Accessomorphosis" was the term he then coined to fuse apparel with the accessories that drive Vuitton sales.
|
|
The art of dressing as featured characters is COSPLAY, a term coined in Japan in the '80s.
|
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He coined the phrase when he and Rupert Murdoch founded Fox News in 1996, and it stuck.
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It was a phenomenon called the Great Gay Migration, a phrase coined by the anthropologist Kath Weston.
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Without the attainment of certain brands and pieces you're quite vulnerable to being coined "broke" and "bummy".
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"Whelming" is a newly coined dating term which describes a behaviour you might already be familiar with.
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In fact, social media was still in its infancy; the term "influencer" had yet to be coined.
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The FANG group of Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google parent Alphabet was coined in name by CNBC's .
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It's a marketing construct built around a discredited prefix that was originally coined for an invented science.
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The phrase was coined by social researcher Mark McCrindle, founder of marketing and trend forecasting firm, McCrindle.
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"Krost added that "a personal brand is not a personal brand unless you have coined a niche.
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He&aposs even coined a term for the market that&aposs emerging around these tools: "privacy ops."
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Selgin, in fact, coined his own term for what is ahead: "Supplementary Organic Asset Purchases," or SOAP.
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They even coined a word for this specific type of influence operation: "Revolutionierungspolitik," or policy of revolutionizing.
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"Irrational exuberance" was a phrase coined by former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan in a speech in 1996.
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The Instabrow, the IG brow, as we coined it, was in around 2015, when Instagram ended Vine.
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The phrase has been scrubbed clean of the "fake gamer" connotations it had when it was coined.
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Academics have even coined the term "arties" for when people take selfies with a work of art.
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The "dark yellow" is a new term, however, coined after Saturday's close-fought win over Swansea City.
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Jackie Kennedy very famously gave the "Camelot interview" in which she coined that reference to Theodore White.
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Print publisher Watanabe Shōzaburō, with whom Hasui worked extensively throughout his career, coined the shin-hanga term.
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The term was coined probably because there's more and more younger women getting married and having children.
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Despite Ressler's claims that he coined the phrase, there's reason to think that someone beat him to it.
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The trend was coined "Swiftmas" (seriously, Swift trademarked it), but this year, the Swift-giving began in October.
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The phrase "what goes on tour stays on tour" was supposedly coined by rugby players in the 1970s.
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The magazine cover alone coined the phrase "Breaks the Internet," sparking a tidal wave of never-ending memes.
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Daniel Goleman coined the term emotional intelligence to describe the ability to manage yourself and your relationships effectively.
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You may have seen it bandied about online, but it was actually coined by academic Dr. Robin DiAngelo.
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He coined the phrase "Whealthcare" to describe how looking after people's money can give insights into their health.
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It wasn't even Eno's first (Discreet Music, 1975), but it was the first time anyone coined the term.
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Ther company also makes a wine appropriately coined Witch's Brew, which is just as cheap as its peer.
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"I'm the person on Black-ish who does constantly say, I've now coined it, 'lady chores,'" she said.
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The title of the song, "Margaritaville," is a term that I coined to describe a fictional location. 8.
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We're always looking for the New New Thing in tech, since long before Michael Lewis coined the phrase.
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"Hot girl Summer 🔥," Jenner commented on the post, using the term coined by rapper Megan Thee Stallion.
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Since the BRICs acronym was coined over a decade ago, it has gripped investors and news headlines alike.
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These fads "broke the internet" (a phrase also coined in 2014) dominating social media feeds across the globe.
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People even coined a term "Oculus Face" because it became such an issue after a huge VR bender.
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She coined the term "choreopoem" to describe the dramatic piece that blends together poetry, dance, music, and song.
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O'Neill famously coined the term BRIC — an acronym referring to the economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China.
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"They are begging for Eva the Diva to come out," she says, quoting a nickname coined on ANTM.
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The elevated futures streak of the previous four years – sometimes coined "beans in the teens" – had officially ended.
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Lisbon also scores well in terms of its "global creative class", as coined by influential academic Richard Florida.
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Hence the recent "unicorns" buzzword, which was coined to denote private companies valued at more than $1 billion.
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They coined the term "net neutrality" and asked for public comment, knowing in advance where they'd take things.
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This gave rise to the derogatory "mummy porn" label coined after the publication of the "50 Shades" trilogy.
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President Donald Trump has applied for trademark protection for the slogan he coined for his 2020 presidential run.
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Emma Watson is happily single and she's even coined a new term to describe her unfettered relationship status.
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The term "smart contracts" was coined in 1994 by Nick Szabo, an American computer scientist and legal scholar.
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Shakespeare objects: He has coined something that makes sense, and he will not have petty convention ruin it.
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Japan has even coined its own term for the extreme culture, "karoshi," which translates as "death by overwork."
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" Hours later, the Nebraska Republican took aim at Spencer in a multi-tweet narrative he coined "America 101.
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The Riley Rose moniker was coined by Linda and Esther Chang, the daughters of Forever 21's founders.
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The term autofiction was coined in 1977 by Serge Doubrovsky to describe autobiographical writing by un-famous writers.
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Some barroom etymologists say the expression "eighty-six" was coined at Chumley's, whose address is 86 Bedford Street.
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Sharks coach Peter DeBoer coined the pair day-to-day, but there is no timetable for their return.
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The concept of the glass cliff was coined in 2005 by two professors at Exeter University, in England.
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Although King did not use the phrase "affirmative action" -- it was coined by Kennedy -- he supported the concept.
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Cryptomancing — a term coined by The Guardian — is the latest trend to grace the world of dating apps.
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Legend has it that Missouri's nickname, The Show Me State, was coined in 24 by Congressman Duncan Vandiver.
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KELLY: I believe it was in 1989 when I walked into Jaron Lanier's lab—he coined the term.
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Indeed, almost overnight, the term "unicorn" became such a liability that industry wags coined a newer term: unicorpses.
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If Michelangelo didn't coin the term, he (with a reluctant nod to Leonardo da Vinci) coined the type.
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This goes back to early '70s that Irving Janis was the social psychologist who coined the term groupthink.
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Dr. Ben-Shahar coined the term "arrival fallacy" after experiencing its effects as a young elite squash player.
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It was coined in 1980 by a noted baseball writer who probably falls under the category STATS GEEK.
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" The sci-fi author Arthur C. Clarke coined the law "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
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The term "phablet" was originally coined to describe a phone that's about as large as a typical tablet.
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Back then, the most exciting, and sometimes most culture-defining, slang was being coined constantly, in real time.
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KFC, which is owned by Yum Brands, coined its catchphrase "finger-lickin' good" more than 8503 years ago.
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KFC, which is owned by Yum Brands, coined its catchphrase "finger lickin' good" more than 60 years ago.
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"I'm playing for Las Vegas, and that whole 'Vegas Strong' slogan that we've kind of coined," he said.
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Their concentration is Arte Povera, a term coined by Germano Celant in 1967 that means, roughly, impoverished art.
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That was the "Mamba-mentality" that he famously coined -- a reference to his nickname -- and regularly spoke about.
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However, that sometimes benign inertia is not what the people who coined that term meant by deep state.
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As the woman who coined "conscious uncoupling," Gwyneth Paltrow has the whole arena of post-romantic relationships covered.
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Giglia — who coined Giu Giu, Raggiani's childhood nickname that would become her brand moniker — passed away in 2014.
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"Animal spirits" is a term coined by economist John Maynard Keynes to describe confidence driven by human emotions.
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It was originally FANG when CNBC's Jim Cramer first coined the term as it did not include Apple.
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Mr. Macron coined the expression "Make our planet great again" to tweak Mr. Trump over the climate decision.
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Groupon and Zynga were big users of these alternatives, for which I coined the names Grouponomics and Zyngametrics.
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Twenty years after the term was coined, retailers and service providers are continuing the hard sell to consumers.
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"Ghosting," even though it was first coined on Urban Dictionary in 2009, existed as a concept for eons.
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Another piece of tech speak coined in the 1990s went on to take over in 2010s: disruptive innovation.
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The term "genderless danshi" was coined by a talent agent, Takashi Marumoto, who has helped develop Toman's career.
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Trump took credit for making up an economic term — "priming the pump" — that was coined in the 1930s.
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In 85033, SisterSong was founded and laid out tenets of the movement and coined the term reproductive justice.
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The headline of that story was when the term "Star Wars" was coined for the SDI program. Right.
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The idea was coined by a Holocaust refugee named Raphael Lemkin, whose family was murdered during the Holocaust.
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The "subscription economy," a term coined by Tzuo, refers to businesses that charge for services rather than physical products.
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The term "millennials," for one, was coined for a book published in 1987 — before many millennials were even born.
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On Friday, Baked Alaska tweeted a video of the "14 Words," coined by the late white supremacist David Lane.
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" The dean of Peking University at the time, Chen Duxiu, coined two catchphrases to summarize the student demands: "Mr.
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When she broke the internet – and coined the phrase for the very first time – posing naked for Paper magazine.
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We even coined the phrase "bomb cyclone" to describe the storm that brought some epic snowfall back in January.
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According to Hagerty, the name came from a sportswriter who coined the name because the team was last place.
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For instance, in 2012, Witherspoon coined the term "Reesza" when shown a photo of a pizza covered in Reese's. .
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Coined in the 1980s, the term refers to the disproportionate exposure of blacks to polluted air, water and soil.
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One of the earliest speculative manias ensued: the word "millionaire" was coined as the Mississippi shares soared in price.
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Anna, a university lecturer, and her friend Sarah coined the phrase 'good day dress' to sum up the phenomenon.
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Widely accused of corruption himself during his time in power, he takes pride in having coined the manan pun.
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"Bagism" is a term Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono, coined during their peace campaign in the late 60s.
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Will Laurie finally take down the man who killed her friends in a horrific spree coined "The Babysitter Murders"?
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The slogan dates back to the network's founding in 1996, when it was coined by former chairman Roger Ailes.
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A disturbing new word, with a distinctly Orwellian ring, has been coined to describe these women: previvors—pre-survivors.
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"Eyes on the street" and "social capital," terms she coined, are now a central part of urban-planning vernacular.
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"Do work," the phrase Boykin coined through the show, is a phrase with once-in-a-generation staying power.
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The Golden Age of Television, while coined years ago to dubious looks from movie snobs, only continued in 2018.
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"In a way, one could say that 'social media' is perhaps the most inapt phrase ever coined," he said.
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Debord references the phrase "lonely crowds," a term coined by the American sociologist David Riesman, to describe our atomization.
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The "Macquarium" name was first coined by Massachusetts tech journalist Andy Ihnatko, who has since created his own Macquariums.
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You also may not know that Neo4j actually coined the term graph database to describe these types of connections.
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James Hand, the man who initially coined Boaty McBoatface, said he was pleased that the name would live on.
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Roenneberg is a professor at the Institute of Medical Psychology at the University of Munich who coined the term.
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The two joined forces in 2016 and coined the term ADOS, which spread as a hashtag on social media.
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For his works of that time, Mr. Penck coined the term Standart to satirize the standardization of modern life.
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Twitter users pointed out that Trump's rant is a betrayal of the United States, and coined the meeting #TreasonSummit.
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Some use a term for this set of policies coined by the Yale political scientist Jacob Hacker: predistribution policy.
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Flower power wilted into gutter mulch, Altamont claimed four lives, and the phrase 'serial killer' was not yet coined.
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Trent Lott reportedly coined the term during George W. Bush's presidency, when Senate Democrats were filibustering Bush's judicial picks.
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At least, not as the Combahee River Collective, which coined the term and theorized its meaning, originally laid out.
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The term "reconation" was coined by MRT's developers to describe the change in moral thinking they seek to inspire.
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I don't know if I coined the term but I used it, then it ended up on the poster.
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Blatter utilized "Trend Influence Marketing," as he coined it, to bring in Camel cigarettes into his network of nightclubs.
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" It makes sense considering this is the woman who coined the slogan "When they go low we go high.
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But he noted that the label actually had been coined in the 1990s by a group of Yunnanese academics.
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In the 1980s, he coined the term "Type T" personality to refer to the behavioral profile of thrill-seekers.
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Brady even coined a name for his unique diet plan, the TB12 diet, and wrote a book about it.
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Our planet might be viewed as a single living organism, coined Gaia by the scientist and futurist James Lovelock.
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He also tells me that, through his research, he's articulated and coined titles for several different types of freezing.
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The term was originally coined during the Great Depression, and it describes an economy that can't quite get healthy.
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A disturbing new word, with a distinctly Orwellian ring, has been coined to describe these women: previvors—pre-survivors.
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The term "subway alums" was coined a century ago, when Notre Dame played some away games in New York.
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Some of the principles even embrace the "Hamptons Five" concept coined by the longtime Bay Area columnist Tim Kawakami.
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He coined and trademarked the name Surf Shop and transformed it into the most successful maker of surfing wetsuits.
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The catchphrase, coined by late Fox founder Roger Ailes, has been used at Fox since its founding in 1996.
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FAANG, coined in 2013, originally didn't include Apple and was intended as a nickname for high-growth internet companies.
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Yan has coined the term "hedge city" for places like Vancouver: they are a hedge against volatility at home.
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The best of Green Monday deals Green Monday, if you haven't heard of it, was first coined by eBay.
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Apple may have coined "There's an app for that" years ago, but it didn't become really true until recently.
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In announcing their separation, Paltrow coined the phrase "consciously uncoupled," which continues to be something of an internet punchline.
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Matsuyama, Japan, is celebrating its 19th-century haiku poet, Masaoka Shiki, who coined the term haiku, with related events.
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But this term was actually first coined in 1979 by an astrologist named Richard Nolle, not by an astronomer.
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In 29, John Mahoney coined the term and wrote a widely cited "taxonomy" of chumbox content for the Awl.
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Experts have even coined a term for phone separation anxiety — nomophobia — and some propose including it in the DSM.
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The term "glass cliff" was first coined by University of Exeter researchers Michelle Ryan and Alexander Haslam in 22016.
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Ultimately, no matter who coined the phrase, the gruesome serial killing phenomenon existed far before the phrase "serial killer" did.
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THE PHRASE "happy as Larry" was coined to describe an Australian boxer who won a bumper prize in the 1890s.
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Microsoft coined the word, but it's a key aspect of any ultraportable: How well does it work in your lap?
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UAS was coined by the Department of Defense in 217, now repurposed by police, to make military weapons more palatable.
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In 1976, Jimmy Carter's pollster coined the term "permanent campaign" to describe the never-concluded process of courting public opinion.
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Wayne coined the phrase "drop it like it's hot," and Snoop borrowed it to make his most successful record ever.
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UAS was coined by the Department of Defense in 2001, now repurposed by police, to make military weapons more palatable.
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Appropriately, this election he has coined the phrase "main bhi chowkidar" — or, "I'm a guard too" — as a mass slogan.
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Hank coined the term "vidya" (+4) as a substitute for "video games" which has more traction online than you realize.
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The Daily Mail has coined the term "economy-class wives" to describe this arrangement, which is, in a word, maddening.
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Glottophobia, though, says Philippe Blanchet, a linguist at the University of Rennes who coined the term, is far from absurd.
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The phrase was coined in 2018 by Atlantic writer Adam Serwer, arguing that this is the common theme in Trumpism.
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The party borrowed the idea of soft power from an American academic, Joseph Nye, who coined the term in 1990.
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" When he told Mr. Wang he wanted to call it REDS, Mr. Wang coined the acronym "Revolutionary Electric Dream Space.
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Wolfe who coined "The Right Stuff" for his book which later became a movie on America&aposs seven original astronauts.
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We're talking, of course, about "Mophie" (the name that's been coined for Maisie Williams and Sophie Turner's ever-adorable friendship).
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An online series, released in 2005, dramatised the careers of American "soft rock" stars and coined the term "yacht rock".
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There's even a newly coined term for the list of health issues brought about by prolonged laptop use: laptop-itis.
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Bolton also brought up the "Troika of Tyranny" — a term he coined last year to describe Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.
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The term "MILF" was practically coined in the late '90s for Stifler's Mom (Jennifer Coolidge) of the American Pie movies.
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While the phrase was coined by a 19th-century poet, the day itself is not officially on the Ascot agenda.
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Although coined in the nineteenth century, the concept of selective breeding and human population culling has a more ancient history.
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"Surroundie" - a term coined by CCS Insight analyst Ben Wood - refers to a selfie taken with a 360 degree camera.
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The "bond vigilantes" are back, according to Ed Yardeni, the economist and investment strategist who coined the term in 1983.
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The brush fire, coined Blue Cut, was 4% contained as of Wednesday evening, according to Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant.
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The term FANG stocks, coined by CNBC's Jim Cramer, refers to the online powerhouses Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, and Alphabet's Google.
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That's why these prototypes are called noisy intermediate-scale quantum computers (NISQ), a term also coined by Preskill in 2017.
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While the term had been circulating before Casey, black feminists officially coined "reproductive justice" at a 4 pro-choice conference.
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Even the term "stan" dates back to the pre-social media era, coined in a 2000 hit song by Eminem.
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At the time, the team coined this as the "nuclear option" because of it's potentially massive impact on the company.
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Kellyanne Conway coined the now-famous phrase "alternative facts" ... and there's been a rush to cash in on her snafu.
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Perhaps because Pantone has coined it Color of the Year, "greenery" is having a major moment in the wedding industry.
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The term "ugly deleveraging" was coined by Ray Dalio of Bridgewater and, in my view, accurately describes the current situation.
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We called it strap-on play back then [the term pegging was coined by sex columnist Dan Savage in 2001].
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Gibson is known for his debut 1984 novel "Neuromancer," in which he coined the term "cyberspace" years before the internet.
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Reid Hoffman, who at one time was PayPal's COO, has coined the phrase "blitzscaling" to describe the road to success.
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This is actually a term coined by professor Bella DePaulo, one of the experts in the field of singles studies.
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In his classic work, 85033, George Orwell coined the term "newspeak" – when the powerful use language to control the people.
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The term itself was coined by a German geographer in the 244th century, but China has adopted it with relish.
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When Lyotard coined his term, he was observing the tendency to conceive of knowledge in the form of story-telling.
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Celia Pearce, a game designer and former theme park builder, coined a phrase to cut through the fight: spatial narrative.
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The term "peak oil" was coined in 1956 by M. King Hubbert, a geologist worried about the stuff running out.
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Conservatives, to borrow a phrase famously coined to describe President Trump's supporters, are taking Brett Kavanaugh seriously but not literally.
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" David Henry Nobody Jr experiments with a cross between performance art, photography, and collage which he has coined as "Resemblagè.
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Leon Lederman, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who coined the term "god particle," died Wednesday at the age of 96.
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The term was coined by Amnesty International, who used it to criticize Manchester City's owner Sheikh Mansour, from Abu Dhabi.
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A century earlier, the Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard coined the phrase "the dizziness of freedom" to capture a similar disorientation.
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He's known to have coined the phrase, "If you have to ask how much it costs, you can't afford it."
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Whether the new words, many of which were coined by the editors, will be widely embraced remains an open question.
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They date from at least May 1981, when the cryptozoologist Loren Coleman coined the term "phantom clowns" to describe them.
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In this de facto role, Preskill has coined catchphrases to make concepts in the math-heavy field easier to grasp.
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Her sister, Nettina, coined the name for Ms. Hayward's program: Popcorn Kidz (People's Organization for Progress, Children of Right Now).
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A modern scholar thinks he might have coined roim, "crime", with the English word at the back of his mind.
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Its organizers practice "instant radical inclusion," a phrase coined by Mr. Quiles Guilló and The Wrong's council member Patrick Lichty.
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The term femicide, or feminicide, was first coined in the 1970s to refer to the killings of women and girls.
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There are several names for this process in the academic literature: "constitutional culture" or, in a phrase coined by Prof.
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Performing as various characters, including Marie Debris, Varble played with nonbinary gender identities long before the term "genderqueer" was coined.
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In 2013, Chris Anderson coined the phrase "the peace dividends of the smartphone wars" to describe this flowering of innovation.
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How did the guy who coined one of the 1990s' most literal punchlines take such a joyless, decade-long detour?
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Some of the birds in the world's museum and university collections were gathered before the word "scientist" was even coined.
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In part, we're talking here about the "professional managerial class," a term you and John Ehrenreich coined in the 1970s.
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The strategy is a nod toward the motto "One Goldman Sachs," which was coined by David Solomon, Goldman Sachs' CEO.
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With that evolving culture comes a constant influx of dating terminology, from Mashable-coined cloaking, to breadcrumbing, and even cryptomancing.
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The historian Ian Kershaw coined the phrase "working toward the Führer" as a way to explain how fascist regimes work.
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Why it matters: Millennials and Generation Zers have coined the phrase "OK, boomer" as a retort against older generations' patronization.
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He once made tiny billboards that clipped onto men's beards, and he coined "the world's longest hashtag" for A&W.
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And it is the reason the Intellectual Dark Web, a term coined half-jokingly by Mr. Weinstein, came to exist.
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Shange coined "choreopoem" to describe her work in "For Colored Girls," a dramatic expression blending poetry, dance, music and song.
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Fittingly, he's coined a term to describe his style, which is at once formally precise and darkly theatrical: minimalist baroque.
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This part of town has been rebranded "Van Mission," a name coined in part by the tower's developer, Related California.
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His advertisements spread cheesecake photos (the term itself coined by Fisher's publicist) of women in bathing suits across the country.
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When I coined that title for myself, I meant the importance of various folk and traditional cultural elements for myself.
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Even though the term 'podcast' was coined in 133, advertising in the medium has exploded in the last ~213 years.
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But for something different watch a film at the Moonlight Cinema, coined as the only permanent outdoor cinema in Europe.
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I was not always a spoonie (a term coined by Christine Mierandino, the award-winning writer and lupus patient advocate).
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Civil rights advocate and Columbia Law School professor Kimberlé Crenshaw explains the term "intersectionality," which she first coined in 1989.
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We look back at how a growing sense of accountability has evolved since the term was coined in the 1970s.
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He coined the phrase and I'm going to pick it up and carry it—for the rest of my life.
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A scholar coined it after a masterpiece in a Berlin museum, whose style is strikingly similar to numerous other pieces.
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It was coined as a way to talk about a third gender without appropriating the term Third Gender from other cultures.
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It's not the Koch brothers, or Russia, or the "vast right-wing conspiracy," the term she coined in back in 1998.
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Still smitten with his future wife, Carter returned to the Navy, where he coined the acronym "ILYTG" to express his passions.
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Delmar Harder created the first Automation Department at the company in the late 1940s and coined the term in the process.
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While International Friendship Day was popularized by greeting card companies, Facebook went a step forward and coined its own birthday, Feb.
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Many people know the phrase alt-right, a term coined by white nationalist Richard Spencer to describe the white nationalist movement.
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When an NBA coach coined this immortal line after a playoff loss, it was truly a gift from the meme gods.
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Just this year, Rebecca Solnit, the feminist writer who coined the term "mansplaining," published a children's picture book titled Cinderella Liberator.
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Marjorie Morgenstern, Marjorie Morningstar (1958) Played by: Natalie Wood If Molly Goldberg coined the Jewish Mother, Marjorie Morgentern invented the JAP.
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Coined by the dating app Hinge, it's essentially defined as presenting yourself on a dating app in an unrealistically positive way.
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People are donating to their favorite charitable organizations on the Tuesday after Cyber Monday, coined #GivingTuesday, to help out charitable organizations.
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There's a name for that vision: platform cooperativism, a term coined by The New School professor Trebor Scholz in December 2014.
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" The term was coined in Milton Friedman's famous 1968 presidential address to the American Economics Association, "The Role of Monetary Policy.
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"It had been coined in the '70s, I think," Paltrow said of using the term to announce their separation in 2014.
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This huge layer of vocabulary was either borrowed directly, borrowed from Latin via French or coined in English from Latin roots.
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After all, long before John Grierson coined the term "documentary" in 1926, the Lumière brothers had made single-reel nonfiction films.
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It's a term coined by psychologist Cordelia Fine to explain how pre-existing stereotypes about men and women shape neuroscience research.
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" They're a subset of fetish coined as "watersports," or more technically called urolagnia, "sexual excitement associated with urine or with urination.
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In January 2017, Kellyanne Conway, at that time President Trump's press secretary, coined the term "alternative facts" on Meet the Press.
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In 2013, the term "text claw" was coined to describe the cramping and soreness caused by too much mobile phone usage.
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The term "bond vigilantes" was coined by Ed Yardeni, the longtime Wall Street strategist now president at his namesake research firm.
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Although this entire process sounds eerily futuristic, people have been getting so-called biogenic tattoos, also coined "morbid ink," for years.
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Few are purely invented, in the sense of being coined from a string of sounds chosen more or less at random.
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Here are the resulting theories about post-sex basketball shorts — or, as Racked's senior editor Alanna Okun coined them, Warby Porkers.
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His other choice would be to rein in the rhetoric and follow a more open approach – coined "Soft Trump" by Lamy.
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Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The term "Outsider Art," coined in 1972 by writer Roger Cardinal, has plenty of critics.
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The very term 'hypermiling' was coined by Gerdes in 23, and it became the Oxford Word of the year in 22.
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Two years later, in 2017, it was reported that the second couple to be coined Bennifer had officially filed for divorce.
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Image: APNazi-saluting white nationalist Richard Spencer—who coined the term "alt-right"—had his Twitter account reinstated, along with verification.
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Long before anyone coined the phrase "gender equality," de Havilland was a pioneer who took on and beat the studio system.
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The term "autophagy" can be translated as "self eating," and was first coined by scientists studying cell behavior in the 1960s.
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In the late 20th century Cleveland was more associated with rock'n'roll (a term coined by a local DJ in the 1950s).
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Coined the "Luv Gov," Bentley resigned from office in May 2017 following an affair with his former political adviser Rebekah Mason.
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Yet, critics say the "dam tsunami" - a term coined by anti-hydropower activists - endangers Europe's last wild rivers, which flow free.
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The famous "WOE" neologism Devontee coined stands for "Working on Excellence" and Head Gone shows that's just what he's been doing.
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It's make-or-break time for the Cramer-coined F.A.N.G. stocks this week as the last of the group reports earnings.
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The film industry is worse, at 0.9 percent," according to industry mag Variety, which coined disabled actors as "Hollywood's invisible minority.
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Coined the Liechtenstein initiative, the commission was launched by the wealthy European principality and by Australia, along with the U.N. University.
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USC Libraries considers what utopia means today, 500 years after Sir Thomas More coined the term for his idealized fictional island.
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President Eisenhower, who coined the term executive privilege, did keep his administration from testifying in Army hearings about allegations that Sen.
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At the time, what the disc jockeys coined as "message music" was pretty big, and that's what I wanted to do.
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The nickname, coined by Neil DeGrasse Tyson, an astrophysicist and head of the Hayden Planetarium, is a reference to England's Stonehenge.
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In the 1950s Michael Young coined the word "meritocracy" to describe a new ruling elite, nastier than an aristocracy or plutocracy.
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Late-night host Jimmy Fallon coined a name for a bill that would require presidential candidates to undergo mental health examinations.
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Mr. Schumacher coined the term parametricism to encompass the computer-based approach that helped the firm's most extravagant concepts become reality.
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Leary coined "Turn on, tune in, drop out," and many of his disciples heeded the advice of this amateur guidance counselor.
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The psychologist Paul Slovic coined this term to describe the way people let their emotions color their beliefs about the world.
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" By 1972, when the Warren Court ruled the death penalty to be essentially unconstitutional, Carrington had coined the term "victims' rights.
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A blogger coined the term, which is used to describe someone who identifies as being sexually attracted to intelligence, in 1998.
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The menstrual equality movement was inspired by global gender-based discrimination against women who menstruate and coined by Jennifer Weiss Wolf.
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" In the midst of his stump speech, he even coined a Trump-esque epithet for his opponent: "dishonest liberal Joe Manchin.
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Black, the Rockies' manager, coined Amarista's nickname "Little Ninja" and often spoke of his "sneaky pull pop" from the left side.
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A review of the play marked the first time that "sex work," a phrase coined by Leigh, appeared in mainstream media.
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Five San Rafael High School students claim to have coined the term "220/220" after regularly meeting at 13:21 p.m.
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Washington still hasn't coined a name for the trick, ostensibly because no words have matched its drama or degree of difficulty.
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In 2016, Ma coined the term "new retail" to describe a future of seamless integration between online and offline retail sales.
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She read "Sexual Harassment of Working Women" (1979) by Catharine MacKinnon, one of the women who coined the term "sexual harassment".
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The band Minor Threat coined the flagship label with their 1981 song "Straight Edge," and the movement took off from there.
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But you coined the term "cultural nexus of power" to describe how villages were linked by something else: religion and culture.
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Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) Ms. Sanger, a nurse, coined the term "birth control" during her decades-long fight to legalize contraception.
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The term artificial intelligence, coined in the 1950s, is something of an unfortunate choice, at least in terms of the automobile.
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" An earlier version of this critic's notebook misstated the surname of one of the designers who coined the term "super normal.
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A fellow foreign teacher coined an expression that we used then, and still use today, to explain away the unexplainable: reasons.
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Phone companies are working on a technology called Stir/Shaken, an industry-coined acronym for a method of authenticating phone numbers.
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Trump reveled in Mattis's nickname "Mad Dog," repeatedly citing it at rallies and, at one point, claiming to have coined it.
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An ecologist, Garrett Hardin, coined the phrase "the tragedy of the commons" in a (shockingly eugenicist) essay in Science in 1968.
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Toni Morrison coined the phrase "black surrogacy" to describe how blackness in classic American literature marked the limits of rational experience.
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The term "Deep State," in fact, was first coined to describe the generals who long ruled Turkey from behind the scenes.
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We now broadly refer to the outpouring of stories as the #MeToo movement, a term originally coined by activist Tarana Burke.
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"New York's Strongest," for example, was said to have been coined for a Sanitation Department football team in the late 1970s.
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After the conference, Callen championed the People With AIDS movement that he had embraced a month after Feldman coined the term.
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Combining data and perception, the index assesses countries on soft power, a term coined by political scientist Joseph Nye in 1990.
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It was a condition, she said, that Ferrante had eloquently coined as "smarginatura," or, roughly put, being pushed to the margins.
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The term was coined in 2007 by a government organization responsible for the protection and promotion of women's rights and policies.
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Afghanistan has long been called the "graveyard of empires" — for so long that it is unclear who coined that disputable term.
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I mean the term coined by Alexander Pope to signify "the art of sinking in poetry," as does Daniel Mallory Ortberg.
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The phrase "Bermuda triangle" was officially coined by Vincent Gaddis in a 1964 pulp magazine article titled "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle."
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Cousins famously coined the catchphrase back in 249 after leading the Washington Redskins to their largest comeback victory in franchise history.
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The VRIC is reminiscent of the acronym BRIC, coined by British economist Jim O'Neill, which represented the four rising world economies.
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In an essay from 403, Troemel coined the term "aesthlete" to describe the type of artist who can maintain relevance today.
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As the company that coined the term, IBM is delighted that policymakers have adopted new collar jobs as an economic priority.
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That term was coined by the 1920s humorist Will Rogers to skewer President Herbert Hoover's policies meant to save the banks.
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The term "podcast" was first coined by journalist Ben Hammersley in The Guardian in 2004, as digital music was rapidly developing.
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Deaths of despair The phrase "deaths of despair" was coined by the Princeton-based economists Sir Angus Deaton and Anne Case.
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Gutiérrez, who coined the nickname "Deporter in Chief" for Obama, pulled his party to the left on many issues, particularly immigration.
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Divers coined the term for the area near Andros island after they pulled thousands of plastic bags from the sea there.
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Davis also took aim at Trump's trademark slogan, "Make America Great Again," a phrase that was first coined by her father.
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A portmanteau is a new word coined by combining two other words, and GAYMER is a portmanteau of GAY and GAMER.
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The word "gentrification" was coined almost offhandedly in 1964, by the British sociologist Ruth Glass, in an essay about postwar London.
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In 1715, artist and writer Jonathan Richardson coined the term "art criticism" in his An Essay on the Theory of Painting.
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Not only was Charles Baudelaire a celebrated French poet, he coined the term "modernity" and promoted the Romantic painter Eugène Delacroix.
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" An Atomwaffen member claimed to have worked on personal security for Richard Spencer, the man who coined the term "alt-right.
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The term "food desert" was coined in the 1990s to describe areas where access to healthy foods is absent or limited.
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Inspired by reducetarian, Mark Pershin, founder and CEO of Australian nonprofit Less Meat Less Heat, coined a word of his own.
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The term "late style" was coined by Theodor Adorno, a German Marxist philosopher, as a label for his doctrinaire view of Beethoven.
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For context, a total of 224.8 companies joined the unicorn club in 280.9 when Aileen Lee, an established investor, coined the term.
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He coined the term for what he thought was a temporary thing, assuming that these feelings would abate soon after the election.
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ONE OF THE most successful advertising taglines coined in Germany in the past two decades was "Geiz ist geil": stinginess is cool.
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Through the first five years of dating Vicki, I was coined as a con man, low life, gold digger, dead beat, etc.
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The Anti-Defamation League, which monitors hate groups, says Spencer coined the term "alt-right" in an effort to rebrand white nationalism.
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You may know him because Danielle Bregoli, or Bhad Bhabie, coined the term "Cash me outside how bou da" on his show.
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The term "love-marriage" was coined to describe those revolutionary couples who bucked tradition and married for the sake of mutual affection.
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All of these airborne passengers found in our personal space make up our "exposome," a term coined by Snyder and his team.
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According to Politico, Sanders, who spoke form Miami on Tuesday night, coined the victory an "enormously successful night," as he thanked volunteers.
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Cramer coined the term "stay-at-home economy" to reflect a shift for the stocks that are most successful on Wall Street.
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Roman comic playwright Plautus coined the term "tragicomoedia," or tragicomedy—a literary genre which blends aspects of both tragic and comic forms.
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Raikou I coined this place the home of "Sumo Soup" because of its hearty hot pots, which can feed a whole family.
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Also, again, Wayne coined the phrase "drop it like it's hot," and Snoop borrowed it to make his most successful record ever.
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Radical techniques were perfected, new terminology was coined, and the people who originally founded the scene were gleefully left in the dust.
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It all began in 2006, when then Harvard professor Andrew McAfee (he has since moved onto MIT), coined the term Enterprise 2.0.
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Littwin, the law professor who coined the term "coerced debt," essentially stumbled upon it while working on a larger study of bankruptcy.
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Kayla Moore, Roy Moore's wife, coined an entirely new term, "full-term abortion," to attack Jones with at a rally before Thanksgiving.
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The American Medical Association led the charge against it, and its PR firm coined the perfect phrase to sink it: "Socialised medicine".
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He's the same dude who coined the term "dig deeper," while he instructs viewers at home to jump higher and squat lower.
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The term "internet of things" itself was coined in 22017, when Kevin Ashton put it in a PowerPoint presentation for Procter & Gamble.
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Prior to 733, Jamaican artists either played mento, calypso, or their best rendition of American R&B, a style coined Jamaican boogie.
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LONDON (Reuters Breakingviews) - In early 2009, fund managers at PIMCO coined the term "new normal" to describe the post-crisis financial landscape.
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Though the phrase "head-banging" was supposedly coined to describe their concerts, it was far from the only effect that they produced.
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The term "Gente-Fied" was coined by the people of Boyle Heights and it means the gentrification of a community from within.
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Impostor phenomenon may be much more common than the psychologists who coined the term originally thought, but that doesn't make it meaningless.
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In 2004, an information architect named Thomas Vander Wal coined the term "folksonomy" to describe language that originates from the masses up.
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In 1996, Michelle Boasten, RN, designed and created the first clinical documentation information system for home healthcare and coined the term EVV.
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Cramer coined the "FANG" acronym on "Mad Money " in 2013 as Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, and Alphabet led the market to new highs.
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In response to an increasing number of cases documented on social media, Airbnb user Quirtina Crittenden coined the hashtag #airbnbwhileblack last year.
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Together, they teach bodysex workshops––"bodysex" being a term Dodson coined in 1975––which speak to the embodiment element of her work.
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Uber has given life to the slogan "move fast and break things" in a way that Facebook, which coined it, never did.
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She was coined "the rocket science news reporter" and she became the youngest person to present information to NASA of that scale.
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Coined by cartoonist Pixelated Boat in a June 2016 tweet, the term comes from a tale about a duck who drinks milkshakes.
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Two key figures in the movement were AppsTech CEO Rebecca Enonchong (who coined the hashtag) and activist and presidential candidate Kah Walla.
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Bill coined this phrase the other day: we're all dominos, so how we interact with each other has a knock-on effect.
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Something more abstract would be either completely made-up and coined, or it has little relationship to the category itself, is disruptive.
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King may not have used the words "affirmative action" -- the term was coined by President Kennedy -- but he often supported the concept.
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In a previous article, I call people like Elon Musk "expert-generalists" (a term coined by Orit Gadiesh, chairman of Bain & Company).
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The term "alt-right" was coined to describe a far-right ideology whose supporters often espouse racist, misogynist and otherwise bigoted views.
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The race was an exhibition of modern Aston Martins against one another, and was coined the Michelin Aston Martin Le Mans Festival.
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Lewis later wrote that they set off Beatlemania-type reactions among fans -- especially female fans -- long before the term Beatlemania was coined.
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" You may have heard of the unofficial February 13 holiday coined by NBC's Parks and Recreation that's all about "ladies celebrating ladies.
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Coined by Tim Wu is 2002, net neutrality refers to the idea that all traffic on the internet should be treated equally.
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Back in the 1950s, the modern use of the term "hacking" was coined within the walls of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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The writer Ntozake Shange coined "choreopoem" for her 1975 work for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf.
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In the late nineteen-twenties, the physiologist Walter Cannon coined the term "homeostasis"—joining together the Greek homoios (similar) and stasis (stillness).
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Joe specializes in original puzzles based on everyday situations, but this week's is a bit different, inspired by Ryan Faley's Coined Phrases.
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So much so that Netflix even coined the new term binge racers to describe a new evolution in our TV-watching habits.
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Not until 1971 did the area gain the name Silicon Valley, which the journalist Don Hoefler coined in an Electronic News article.
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As a young adult, Mike Pence voted for Jimmy Carter after a catchphrase he coined, "I'm a Carter Supparter," went semi-viral.
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And in 1991 she coined the term "nuts and sluts" to describe the campaign Clarence Thomas supporters waged to discredit Anita Hill.
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Tarana Burke, who coined the phrase in 2006, emphasizes as she has many times before that this cult of personality is unhelpful.
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Admittedly, before Debussy there was Wagner, whose impact was sufficiently seismic that the term "Wagnerism" had to be coined to describe it.
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Wikipedia traces its roots to "Bush Derangement Syndrome" -- a term first coined by the late conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer back in 2003.
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These days, debate is being stifled on university campuses in the name of political correctness, a term coined by the Stalinist regime.
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Professor Winner coined the term "mythinformation," the wishful thinking that with open access to technology, the world will become a better place.
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And Oklahomans are proud to be called Okies, a term coined by Californians to disparage people who were fleeing the Dust Bowl.
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Edmar Bacha, a friend and economist, had coined the term "Belindia" to describe Brazil — a prosperous Belgium perched atop a teeming India.
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In the early 1940s, the US Navy coined the word "radar," standing for "Radio Direction and Ranging" or "Radio Detection and Ranging."
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Benchmark coined the term "megafactory" to describe factories that produce more than 1 gigawatt-hour of total capacity in a single year.
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Biracial or multiracial people like myself have challenged America's "either/or" approach to race long before someone coined the term racial fluidity.
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He would publish groundbreaking work on the study of mania and coined the term "secondary mania" as a type of manic depression.
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He coined the attack "PixPocket" after the hardware the tool targets: Cisco PIX, a popular, albeit now outdated, firewall and VPN appliance.
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"A Milli" might be a better display of all-out rap prowess and flow, but "6 Foot 7 Foot" coined more quotables.
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Two decades after social scientists coined the term "smart cities," the dream of tech-enabled communities has yet to come to fruition.
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" To describe that very process, Arline Geronimus, a professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, coined the term "weathering.
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This year's No-Longer-Live in HD program, as I've coined it, comes to a close this weekend with two intriguing offerings.
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Researchers have coined the term "computational propaganda" to describe the explosion of deceptive social media campaigns on services like Facebook and Twitter.
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More memorable was what linguists named the "most outrageous" word of 1990 — the newly coined phrase "politically correct," or "PC" for short.
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He also coined the controversial term "quantum supremacy" to broadly describe a task in which a quantum computer surpasses a conventional computer.
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Bush mixes fact and fiction, bringing to mind the "truthiness" Stephen Colbert coined to describe the Bush administration's shaky relationship with reality.
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Bernhardt is the subject of a current Broadway play; the word "doozy," Rader says, was coined to describe Duse's blockbuster American tours.
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The term was coined in 2000 by Luis von Ahn, Manuel Blum, Nicholas J. Hopper, and John Langford of Carnegie Mellon University.
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This phenomenon has become known as the Overview Effect, a phrase coined in 22009 by the author and space philosopher Frank White.
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He coined the term "engaged Buddhism" and encouraged Buddhists to take action to improve the lives of the disadvantaged and promote peace.
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Oxford says that it was coined in the 1960s by legendary Vogue editor Diana Vreeland to describe the countercultural moment in London.
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It was originally a partnership between ESquared and the chef Laurent Tourondel, who coined the name, which stands for Bistro Laurent Tourondel.
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Matsuyama, Japan, is honoring its 19th-century poet, Masaoka Shiki, who coined the term haiku, with a range of sake-fortified celebrations.
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The growth of extra-constitutional powers is what Arthur Schlessinger had in mind when he coined the phrase "imperial presidency" in 1973.
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The term "Greenspan put" was coined when the Fed was quick to cut interest rates and keep them low following market slumps.
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The venture capitalist Nick Hanauer and Eric Liu, a former Bill Clinton domestic policy adviser, coined "middle-out economics" five years ago.
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The man who claims to have coined that word, Nathan Homer, is the chief commercial and marketing officer for the European Tour.
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It was coined by Romanian scientist Corneliu E. Giurgea in 1972 when he created a drug he believed enhanced memory and learning.
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He's triggered a 'Trumplash' against his own policies A CNN commentator once coined a memorable phrase to describe why Trump was elected.
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It's a term that Wall Street traders coined to describe the moment when collapsing markets briefly rise before resuming a downward trajectory.
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In the late 1980s, the phrase, coined by Joseph S. Nye Jr., the political scientist, was employed in a foreign policy context.
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In the late 1980s, the phrase, coined by Joseph S. Nye Jr., the political scientist, was employed in a foreign policy context.
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Emma Watson coined the viral term "self-partnered" in November 2019, which she explained to Vogue meant she&aposs happy being single.
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Munves joined 210data fresh out of college in 210 at a time when the term "alternative data" had barely even been coined.
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Short for "high earner not rich yet," the term Henry was coined by Shawn Tully at Fortune magazine nearly 20 years ago.
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There's been a lot of research on filter bubbles — the term you coined almost 10 years ago — and how algorithms impact us.
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Another recent effort includes a digital campaign in 12 states attacking Republicans on the "Jimmy Kimmel test," a phrase coined by Sen.
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To help market his charges, Massenburg coined the genre name "neo-soul," which has stuck to both D'Angelo and Badu ever since.
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Atlantic writer Robinson Meyer, who coined "Berniebro," saw the term morph into something that had little in common with his original intention.
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" These companies should be considered, to borrow a term coined by the law professor Jack Balkin, "information fiduciaries" — or perhaps "data fiduciaries.
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Clayton Christensen, the business scholar who coined the term "disruptive innovation," died at a Boston hospital this week, the Deseret News reports.
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The famous phrase "software eats the world" was originally coined to describe how technology gradually replaces the old industrial norms of production.
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It was Lorde who coined the term, "Afro-German," as she encouraged the women to tell their stories and forge an identity.
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The Federal Emergency Management Agency coined the term "Waffle House Index" to measure the effect of a natural disaster on an area.
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Conservative campaigners have coined the term "Workington Man" to describe the sort of voters they must win over to deliver a victory.
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He has coined the term "Washington cartel," when referring to money in politics, accusing his opponents of being part of the problem.
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Some of the monikers were self-anointed, others were coined by friends, and a few were catalyzed by his social-media following.
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So when she coined the term "hot girl summer," empowering women to do whatever the hell they wanted, her fans followed suit.
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Around 2,000 years ago, our ancestors coined a phrase: "min yi shi wei tian" — food is the top priority of the people.
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The psychologist Dorothy Tennov coined the term "limerence" in 1979 to describe the obsessive early stages of love, particularly the unrequited kind.
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Coined derisively by a critic, the name was adopted by Monet and his fellow Impressionists, including Pierre Auguste Renoir and Camille Pissarro.
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It's not surprising that "UX" was coined at Apple, and your success is attributed to this approach: Technology in service of humanity.
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The term "procedural," when it was first coined, meant a crime drama that focused heavily on the procedure behind solving a crime.
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His post also includes the 14 Words — a phrase coined by a white supremacist who killed a Jewish radio host in 1984.
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Followed by the Razzie nominated The Happening, that came just before the movie that coined the phrase "racebending," with The Last Airbender.
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