释义 |
newspeak
new·speak N0086800 (no͞o′spēk′, nyo͞o′-)n. Deliberately ambiguous and contradictory language used to mislead and manipulate the public. [From Newspeak, , a language invented by George Orwell in the novel 1984.]newspeak (ˈnjuːˌspiːk) nthe language of bureaucrats and politicians, regarded as deliberately ambiguous and misleading[C20: from 1984, a novel by George Orwell]new•speak (ˈnuˌspik, ˈnyu-) n. (sometimes cap.) a propagandistic style of language marked by ambiguity, misstatement, and contradiction. (new + speak, coined by George Orwell in his novel 1984 (1949)] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | newspeak - deliberately ambiguous and contradictory language use to mislead and manipulate the public; "the welfare state brought its own newspeak"manufacturing, manufacture, fabrication - the act of making something (a product) from raw materials; "the synthesis and fabrication of single crystals"; "an improvement in the manufacture of explosives"; "manufacturing is vital to Great Britain" | TranslationsNewspeak
NewspeakA language inspired by Scratchpad.
[J.K. Foderaro. "The Design of a Language for AlgebraicComputation", Ph.D. Thesis, UC Berkeley, 1983].newspeakofficial speech of Oceania; language of contradictions. [Br. Lit.: 1984]See: Hypocrisynewspeak Related to newspeak: doublethinkWords related to newspeaknoun deliberately ambiguous and contradictory language use to mislead and manipulate the publicRelated Words- manufacturing
- manufacture
- fabrication
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