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The term has stuck.
"The term has stuck because it is just easier to remember than its medical name, 'benign idiopathic nocturnal limb pains of childhood'.
The eminent biologist E. O. Wilson first called this need "biophilia," and the term has stuck.
The term has stuck, but nowadays, psychologists have a few other ideas about what causes nightmares.
She called this phenomenon the "Trump effect," and the term has stuck thanks to the link between the increasing anxiety and harassment among minority children and the president-elect's campaign rhetoric, which was filled with hate from his calls to ban all Muslim immigration to his generalization that all Mexican immigrants are rapists.
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But the term, with its implied judgment, has stuck.
Two centuries later his term for London, the "Great Wen", has stuck with us.
British journalists called the music Krautrock, an unfortunate term, despised by German musicians themselves, which has stuck, nonetheless.
South America's largest economy has stuck rigorously to the terms of its agreements with the Fund since 1999.
However, the long-term trend -- even in recent years -- has stuck close to a straight line, slanting upward, except for one big dip representing the great depression of the 1930s.
The name has stuck, says Capt. Paul McCormack, but it's more a term of endearment.... and Stricken Horses Q.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com