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newspeak
[ noo-speek, nyoo- ]
noun
- (sometimes initial capital letter) an official or semiofficial style of writing or saying one thing in the guise of its opposite, especially in order to serve a political or ideological cause while pretending to be objective, as in referring to “increased taxation” as “revenue enhancement.”
newspeak
/ ˈnjuːˌspiːk /
noun
- the language of bureaucrats and politicians, regarded as deliberately ambiguous and misleading
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of newspeak1
Example Sentences
Pushkin called the bill “political rubbish” and compared it to the book “1984,” George Orwell’s classic chilling tale of a society in which facts are distorted and suppressed in a cloud of “newspeak.”
Such language is right-wing newspeak for a second Civil War.
Fox News' slogans and catch-phrases such as "Fair & Balanced", "Real News. Real Honest Opinion", and "We Report. You Decide" are Orwellian newspeak; Fox News is doing exactly the opposite.
Their Orwellian newspeak version of "freedom, liberty and individual rights" just means that people are free as long as they do what Republicans want.
“Food processor” sounds like newspeak concocted by a sinister culinary regime to reassure the international community.
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