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NeologismIn linguistics, a neologism is a recently invented word. New meanings for existing words or phrases are sometimes also called neologisms. Neologisms are especially useful in identifying new inventions, new phenomena, or old ideas which have taken on a new cultural context.It is widely in the human nature to name and create language. It is written in the Christian Bible that one of man's first tasks was to name each animal in turn. Words are continually entering and leaving our language, with defining institutions like the Oxford English Dictionary struggling to keep up. Neologisms are often created by combining existing words or giving words new and unique suffixes and/or prefixes. The word "video" has long been used to describe any visual image on a television screen, and "tape" to a thin strip: "videotape" is an invented word, named by combining the words for two of its key features. (a phrase like "compact disc" isn't considered a neologism, since neither word was changed or re-defined in its creation). And the words "video" and "audio" themselves were not borrowed from the Latin until the twentieth century, when new technology required words to define the two concepts. Words which are combined are often shortened or lengthened, such as "smoke" and "fog" becoming smog. Neologisms can also be created through abbreviation, acronym (such as laser), by intentionally rhyming with existing words, or simply through playing with sounds. It is very rare, however, for a word to enter common use if it doesn't resemble another word or words in an identifiable way. (In these cases, strange new words succeed because the idea behind them is especially memorable or exciting, such as, again, laser). A recent example of a neologism is the word dot-com, denoting a company that relies on the internet for most or all of its business, which arose due to the frequency of businesses including ".com" in their company name. As the internet became a major market force, it required the creation of an easy term to describe these businesses. This is an easily pin-pointed example of how a new idea quickly becomes a new word, usually based on a void in the current language or a need to expedite the expression of an idea which is gain popularity. Neologisms often enter the language through mass media, the internet, or through word of mouth - especially, many linguists suspect, by younger people.
Types of Neologism
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PROFESSOR RUBEK.
[Evasively.] Any evil?--How can I be sure what you would call.html">call it?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
I will tell.html">tell you, if you will sit and listen quietly to what I say.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
[Interrupting.] And you must not look at me while I am telling you.
Now tell me.
him. When I had found you, I knew at once how I should make use of
IRENE.
"The Resurrection Day" you called your life.html">life-work.--I call it "our
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
I was young then--with no knowledge of life. The Resurrection, I
unsullied woman--with none of our earth-life's experiences--awakening
and impure.
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
[Hesitating.] Not absolutely and entirely so, Irene.
stood for you?
followed, Irene. "The Resurrection Day" became in my mind's eye
round plinth on which your figure stood erect and solitary--it no
IRENE.
[Groped for her knife, but desists.] What imagery did you add then?
PROFESSOR RUBEK.
I imagined that which I saw with my eyes around me in the world. I
--made it wide and spacious. And on it I placed a segment of the
now swarm men and women with dimly-suggested animal-faces. Women and
IRENE.
[In breathless suspense.] But in the middle of the rout there stands
Arnold?
that figure a little back.html">back. For the sake of the general effect, you
IRENE.
But the joy in the light still transfigures my face?
idea required.
Arnold.
IRENE.
And in that design you have shifted me back, a little toned down--to
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