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My 9-year-old daughter hunkers down for hours with the Warriors books. She's on her fifth run through the dozens of tomes in this series that our local libraries keep handy about clans of cats who want nothing to do with people. Poring over them does wonders for my daughter's vocabulary, but I could do without the occasional hissing and other feline habits she's acquired.
Meanwhile, my 8-year-old son is hooked on Dav Pilkey's Captain Underpants graphic novels. Those books chronicle the adventures of two potty-talking boys, often joined by their trance-prone principal cavorting around in a cape and skivvies. Somehow, he's reading above grade level anyway.
Becoming avid readers made my bookworms interested in the mechanics of language. The other day, we talked about neologisms -- words that don't yet exist but ought to, since they're instantly clear.
It began when my daughter accidentally coined "enstrict." I explained that while it's not a word, the term has great potential. Enstrict would save syllables for folks who get fed up with discipline-obsessed teachers and other instructors. The derivative words, including "enstriction" and "enstrictor," could come in handy too.
There's no better time to embrace new words than the start of a New Year. So as a public service, I've come up with some neologisms that could come in handy in 2016:
For starters, how about "trumpalist"? As in: "This candidate's trumpalist tendencies scare me." Pundits could use this word to economize on hot air when they discuss pompous, cruel, and self-centered politicians, even after Donald Trump's White House bid fizzles. No matter what the polls say, I still say his candidacy is doomed.
As Trump put it recently, after converting a vulgar Yiddish noun into a verb and applying it to Hillary Clinton's 2008 performance, he's going to get "schlonged."
"Trailrazer" would also enrich our political vocabulary. Trailrazing is what happens after trumpalist bids ultimately collapse. It's the opposite of having political coattails. Toxic candidates dim the chances of other members of their party winning races in the same electoral cycle.
Thanks to trumpalist politicos and their trailrazing ways, legions of political junkies and journalists will be incapable of unplugging from now until long after Election Day. They'll need "vacational" training to learn how to untether their mind and body from electronic devices and the news cycle.
Since I often write about the financial woes of fossil fuel companies, here's a new word for that: "debtidend." This neologism will prove useful should oil prices sink lower in 2016, especially if they graze $20 a barrel. As unprofitable oil and gas companies keep paying investors more in debtidends than they can sustain, they'll risk insolvency. Here's looking at you, Chevron.
Maybe some of these there-oughta-be-a-word words have occurred to you before, too. If so, use them liberally. They deserve the exposure.
Should The Donald or his bromantic partner Ted Cruz nab the presidency in 2016, millions of stunned Americans will need loads of new words to express how we feel about trumpalist trailrazers. But if that happens, don't count on me for more neologisms. I'd be busy getting some vacational training or moving with my family to Canada.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
My 9-year-old daughter hunkers down for hours with the Warriors books. She's on her fifth run through the dozens of tomes in this series that our local libraries keep handy about clans of cats who want nothing to do with people. Poring over them does wonders for my daughter's vocabulary, but I could do without the occasional hissing and other feline habits she's acquired.
Meanwhile, my 8-year-old son is hooked on Dav Pilkey's Captain Underpants graphic novels. Those books chronicle the adventures of two potty-talking boys, often joined by their trance-prone principal cavorting around in a cape and skivvies. Somehow, he's reading above grade level anyway.
Becoming avid readers made my bookworms interested in the mechanics of language. The other day, we talked about neologisms -- words that don't yet exist but ought to, since they're instantly clear.
It began when my daughter accidentally coined "enstrict." I explained that while it's not a word, the term has great potential. Enstrict would save syllables for folks who get fed up with discipline-obsessed teachers and other instructors. The derivative words, including "enstriction" and "enstrictor," could come in handy too.
There's no better time to embrace new words than the start of a New Year. So as a public service, I've come up with some neologisms that could come in handy in 2016:
For starters, how about "trumpalist"? As in: "This candidate's trumpalist tendencies scare me." Pundits could use this word to economize on hot air when they discuss pompous, cruel, and self-centered politicians, even after Donald Trump's White House bid fizzles. No matter what the polls say, I still say his candidacy is doomed.
As Trump put it recently, after converting a vulgar Yiddish noun into a verb and applying it to Hillary Clinton's 2008 performance, he's going to get "schlonged."
"Trailrazer" would also enrich our political vocabulary. Trailrazing is what happens after trumpalist bids ultimately collapse. It's the opposite of having political coattails. Toxic candidates dim the chances of other members of their party winning races in the same electoral cycle.
Thanks to trumpalist politicos and their trailrazing ways, legions of political junkies and journalists will be incapable of unplugging from now until long after Election Day. They'll need "vacational" training to learn how to untether their mind and body from electronic devices and the news cycle.
Since I often write about the financial woes of fossil fuel companies, here's a new word for that: "debtidend." This neologism will prove useful should oil prices sink lower in 2016, especially if they graze $20 a barrel. As unprofitable oil and gas companies keep paying investors more in debtidends than they can sustain, they'll risk insolvency. Here's looking at you, Chevron.
Maybe some of these there-oughta-be-a-word words have occurred to you before, too. If so, use them liberally. They deserve the exposure.
Should The Donald or his bromantic partner Ted Cruz nab the presidency in 2016, millions of stunned Americans will need loads of new words to express how we feel about trumpalist trailrazers. But if that happens, don't count on me for more neologisms. I'd be busy getting some vacational training or moving with my family to Canada.
My 9-year-old daughter hunkers down for hours with the Warriors books. She's on her fifth run through the dozens of tomes in this series that our local libraries keep handy about clans of cats who want nothing to do with people. Poring over them does wonders for my daughter's vocabulary, but I could do without the occasional hissing and other feline habits she's acquired.
Meanwhile, my 8-year-old son is hooked on Dav Pilkey's Captain Underpants graphic novels. Those books chronicle the adventures of two potty-talking boys, often joined by their trance-prone principal cavorting around in a cape and skivvies. Somehow, he's reading above grade level anyway.
Becoming avid readers made my bookworms interested in the mechanics of language. The other day, we talked about neologisms -- words that don't yet exist but ought to, since they're instantly clear.
It began when my daughter accidentally coined "enstrict." I explained that while it's not a word, the term has great potential. Enstrict would save syllables for folks who get fed up with discipline-obsessed teachers and other instructors. The derivative words, including "enstriction" and "enstrictor," could come in handy too.
There's no better time to embrace new words than the start of a New Year. So as a public service, I've come up with some neologisms that could come in handy in 2016:
For starters, how about "trumpalist"? As in: "This candidate's trumpalist tendencies scare me." Pundits could use this word to economize on hot air when they discuss pompous, cruel, and self-centered politicians, even after Donald Trump's White House bid fizzles. No matter what the polls say, I still say his candidacy is doomed.
As Trump put it recently, after converting a vulgar Yiddish noun into a verb and applying it to Hillary Clinton's 2008 performance, he's going to get "schlonged."
"Trailrazer" would also enrich our political vocabulary. Trailrazing is what happens after trumpalist bids ultimately collapse. It's the opposite of having political coattails. Toxic candidates dim the chances of other members of their party winning races in the same electoral cycle.
Thanks to trumpalist politicos and their trailrazing ways, legions of political junkies and journalists will be incapable of unplugging from now until long after Election Day. They'll need "vacational" training to learn how to untether their mind and body from electronic devices and the news cycle.
Since I often write about the financial woes of fossil fuel companies, here's a new word for that: "debtidend." This neologism will prove useful should oil prices sink lower in 2016, especially if they graze $20 a barrel. As unprofitable oil and gas companies keep paying investors more in debtidends than they can sustain, they'll risk insolvency. Here's looking at you, Chevron.
Maybe some of these there-oughta-be-a-word words have occurred to you before, too. If so, use them liberally. They deserve the exposure.
Should The Donald or his bromantic partner Ted Cruz nab the presidency in 2016, millions of stunned Americans will need loads of new words to express how we feel about trumpalist trailrazers. But if that happens, don't count on me for more neologisms. I'd be busy getting some vacational training or moving with my family to Canada.