academese

academese
A formal or artificial form of communicating prevalent in institutes of higher education. It is not really a language but a style of language that is almost a dialect.

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  • academese — /ak euh deuh meez , mees , euh kad euh /, n. pedantic, pretentious, and often confusing academic jargon: a presumably scholarly article written in incomprehensible academese. [ACADEM(IC) + ESE] * * * …   Universalium

  • academese — aca·de·mese …   English syllables

  • academese — ə¦kadə¦mēz, ¦akəd , ēs noun ( s) Etymology: academic + ese (II) : a style of writing held to be characteristic of academic people …   Useful english dictionary

  • Center for Talented Youth — The Center for Talented Youth (CTY) is a gifted education program for school age children, founded in 1979 by Dr. Julian Stanley at Johns Hopkins University. It was initially a research study of the rate at which gifted children can learn new… …   Wikipedia

  • Geoffrey Hill — For the British aeronautical engineer and professor, see Geoffrey T. R. Hill Geoffrey Hill (born June 18, 1932) is an English poet, professor emeritus of English literature and religion, and former co director of the Editorial Institute, at… …   Wikipedia

  • War with the Newts — infobox Book | name = War with the Newts title orig = Válka s mloky translator = image caption = author = Karel Čapek illustrator = cover artist = country = Czechoslovakia language = Czech series = genre = Satirical Science fiction novel… …   Wikipedia

  • jargon — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. lingo, shoptalk, patois, cant, argot, jive (sl.); double talk; gibberish. See concealment, unmeaningness. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Unintelligible, trite, or pretentious speech] Syn. gibberish, mumbo… …   English dictionary for students

  • language — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) System of communication Nouns 1. language, tongue, lingo, vernacular, mother tongue, protolanguage; living or dead language; idiom, parlance, phraseology; wording; dialect, patois, cant, jargon, lingo,… …   English dictionary for students

  • unmeaningness — (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Lack of meaning or sense Nouns 1. unmeaningness, meaninglessness, senselessness, etc.; absurdity, inanity; ambiguity (see unintelligibility); oxymoron. 2. nonsense, verbiage, mere words, empty sound, dead… …   English dictionary for students

  • gobbledegook — n 1. obfuscation, confusion, complexity, buzz word; educationese, computerese, academese, bureaucratese, legalese, medicalese; wordiness, verbosity, prolixity, prolixness, verbiage, verbalism; diffuseness, profuseness, profusiveness, effusion,… …   A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

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