Sentence examples for buzzwords from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(2)

The word 'buzzwords' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe words or phrases that are popular or become popular due to their widespread use. For example, “The latest buzzwords in the corporate world are 'work-life balance' and 'synergy'.”.

Dictionary

buzzwords

noun

Plural of buzzword

synonyms

Exact(60)

No wonder the New York Times's TV critic Alessandra Stanley referred to the "Britishification" – hardly the buzziest of buzzwords, but it'll have to do – of American television.

Love Money Party finds Cyrus rapping a series of non-sequitur buzzwords, gibberish loosely connected by a bit of production, driven by the inescapable purpose of Bangerz: a desire to wind people up for commercial, rather than transgressive, ends".

The prime minister, using buzzwords beloved by focus groups, announced a raft of restrictions on benefits, social housing and so-called health tourism.

This has barely even counted as a campaign, more an opportunity for some of the world's least charismatic nimrods to squabble over a maximum of about 10 seats with a mixture of empty buzzwords and gaspingly insincere stop-offs at regional scotch egg factories.

Like Paul Ryan's book, it is liberally seasoned with right-wing buzzwords: liberty, freedom, jobs, competition, values.

The speech was littered with liberal buzzwords about equal opportunity, equal marriage, rehabilitation, justice, human rights and freedom.

The buzzwords are "highly integrative".

A mile wide and howling Cell phones Fighting China's hackers Riotous assembly Who? Rand Paul's dream Reprints Related topics Tax law Law Crime and law Tax policy Political policyThe IRS selected for extra scrutiny groups whose names included conservative buzzwords, such as "tea party", "9/12" and "patriot".

It is impossible to imagine him rigging best-seller lists, dreaming up buzzwords, or doing any of the other things that have become associated with that most dubious of professions.

The big buzzwords in Japan are kakusa kakudai (growing inequality) and waakingu pua (literally, "working poor").

But knowledge workers who enter the labour force in their 20s are likely to be still in good physical and mental shape 50 years later".Second career" and "second half of one's life" have already become buzzwords in America.

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