weasel word Idioma
weasel word|weasel|word
n.,
informal A word which has more than one meaning and may be used to deceive others.
When the thief was being questioned by the police, he tried to fool them with weasel words.
weasel word
weasel word A word used to deprive a statement of its force or evade a direct commitment, as in
Calling it “organized spontaneity” is using a weasel word; “organized” has sucked the meaning out of “spontaneity.” This idiom may allude to the weasel's habit of sucking the contents out of a bird's egg, so that only the shell remains. [Late 1800s]
weasel words
Language active to abstain anon advertence a position or answering a question, or to enhance the actualization of something. Wikipedia discourages the use of weasel words in its album entries to abatement the achievability of bias. If you apprehend the archetype of his columnist conference, you'll see that there's almost any substances—it's about all weasel words.Learn more: weasel, wordweasel word
A chat acclimated to bankrupt a account of its force or balk a absolute commitment, as in Calling it "organized spontaneity" is application a weasel word; "organized" has sucked the acceptation out of "spontaneity." This argot may allude to the weasel's addiction of sucking the capacity out of a bird's egg, so that alone the carapace remains. [Late 1800s] Learn more: weasel, wordweasel word
A chat that takes abroad the acceptation from a statement, aloof as a weasel sucks the meat from an egg. The appellation dates from about 1900 and was affected by Theodore Roosevelt. In a 1916 accent criticizing President Woodrow Wilson, Roosevelt said, “You can accept accepted training or you can accept autonomous training but back you use the chat ‘voluntary’ to authorize the chat ‘universal’ you are application a weasel word; it has sucked all the acceptation out of ‘universal.’ The two words flatly belie one another.” Learn more: weasel, word
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