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They habitually speak in terms of "forward trajectories", "shifting the axis" or being "ahead of the curve".
For of the fallacies that consist in language, some depend upon a double meaning, e.g. ambiguity of words and of phrases, and the fallacy of like verbal forms (for we habitually speak of everything as though it were a particular substance -while fallaciesubstance -while and division and accent arise because the phrase in question or the term as altered is not the same as was intended.
Lancaster offered the example of Britain's National Health Service, "where managers habitually speak using car metaphors, such as 'driving' change and 'accelerating' reform, whereas clinicians habitually speak using war metaphors, (such as) 'fighting cancer' and 'getting resources to the front line'".
In the early modern period, philosophers habitually speak of relations as the "products of comparison" or "results of thought", while at the same time allowing for things to be related apart from the activity of any mind.
The reason postmodern literary artists habitually speak of immanence rather than transcendence, and think of themselves as being operationally disinclined to author acts of transcendence, is because, since the advent of Language writing, poststructuralist literary theory has spoken of immanence and transcendence only in terms of linguistic operations.
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President Johnson had habitually spoken as though his fondest wish was to disengage from Vietnam.
What disturbed my friend was the contempt with which such people habitually spoke of the Scottish Parliament.
His great revolutionary contribution was to forge, almost single-handedly, a modern Russian literary language during an era when high society habitually spoke French and the peasantry a crude dialect.
At the time, most were rich merchants during British rule instead of manual labourers and many habitually spoke Malay, dressed in the Malay style, and preferred Malay cuisine.
Whorf explained that by habitually speaking of the vapor-filled drums as empty and by extension as inert, the workers were oblivious to the risk posed by smoking near the "empty drums".
Article 160 of the Constitution of Malaysia defines a Malay as a Malaysian citizen born to a Malaysian citizen who professes to be a Muslim, habitually speaks the Malay language, adheres to Malay customs, and is domiciled in Malaysia or Singapore.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com