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单词 officialese
释义

Definition of officialese in English:

officialese

noun əfɪʃəˈliːzəˌfɪʃəˈliz
mass noun
  • The formal and typically verbose style of writing considered to be characteristic of official documents, especially when it is difficult to understand.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In 1979, taking a different tack, Plain English Campaign publicly destroyed government forms as the opening move in a crusade against officialese and obfuscation.
    • In rather guarded officialese, it points to a shaky financial situation with the potential for huge financial losses.
    • They have been ‘settled,’ as colonial officialese put it, by a set of State policies that might be better described as disciplined and tamed.
    • His letter is expressed in his own language, and not in officialese, but to my mind it is clearly a formal request to carry out the works referred to.
    • The simple lending and savings schemes described as ‘micro-financing’ or ‘micro-credit’ in officialese, is seen as the viable solution to livelihood where poverty is the overriding factor.
    • The vulgar language was a way of signalling to the voters that he was one of them, not speaking in political officialese or respecting the conventions of polite society.
    • Imagine if we were able as a church to leave aside all the bureaucratic officialese, all the empty titles, and all the massaging of personal egos.
    • That is officialese for saying that they are making the mandatory bow to non-commercial programming, but note that it is only open to the same commercial broadcasters.
    • I'm thinking, for example, of so-called legalese and officialese - sentences like ‘We are in receipt of your communication of 12 inst. and wish to convey our most sincere gratitude for same.’

Rhymes

Achinese, Ambonese, appease, Assamese, Balinese, Belize, Beninese, Bernese, bêtise, Bhutanese, breeze, Burmese, Cantonese, Castries, cerise, cheese, chemise, Chinese, Cingalese, Cleese, Congolese, Denise, Dodecanese, ease, éminence grise, expertise, Faroese, freeze, Fries, frieze, Gabonese, Genoese, Goanese, Guyanese, he's, Japanese, Javanese, jeez, journalese, Kanarese, Keys, Lebanese, lees, legalese, Louise, Macanese, Madurese, Maltese, marquise, Milanese, Nepalese, overseas, pease, Pekinese, Peloponnese, Piedmontese, please, Portuguese, Pyrenees, reprise, Rwandese, seise, seize, Senegalese, she's, Siamese, Sienese, Sikkimese, Sinhalese, sleaze, sneeze, squeeze, Stockton-on-Tees, Sudanese, Sundanese, Surinamese, Tabriz, Taiwanese, tease, Tees, telegraphese, these, Timorese, Togolese, trapeze, valise, Viennese, Vietnamese, vocalese, wheeze
 
 

Definition of officialese in US English:

officialese

nounəˌfɪʃəˈlizəˌfiSHəˈlēz
  • The formal and typically verbose style of writing considered to be characteristic of official documents, especially when it is difficult to understand.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The simple lending and savings schemes described as ‘micro-financing’ or ‘micro-credit’ in officialese, is seen as the viable solution to livelihood where poverty is the overriding factor.
    • That is officialese for saying that they are making the mandatory bow to non-commercial programming, but note that it is only open to the same commercial broadcasters.
    • In rather guarded officialese, it points to a shaky financial situation with the potential for huge financial losses.
    • I'm thinking, for example, of so-called legalese and officialese - sentences like ‘We are in receipt of your communication of 12 inst. and wish to convey our most sincere gratitude for same.’
    • Imagine if we were able as a church to leave aside all the bureaucratic officialese, all the empty titles, and all the massaging of personal egos.
    • His letter is expressed in his own language, and not in officialese, but to my mind it is clearly a formal request to carry out the works referred to.
    • They have been ‘settled,’ as colonial officialese put it, by a set of State policies that might be better described as disciplined and tamed.
    • The vulgar language was a way of signalling to the voters that he was one of them, not speaking in political officialese or respecting the conventions of polite society.
    • In 1979, taking a different tack, Plain English Campaign publicly destroyed government forms as the opening move in a crusade against officialese and obfuscation.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 21:02:13