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【was heidi van pelt on home improvement】What Does 'Amoral' Mean? Harry Reid's Trump Comment Gives Word a 4,300% Search Bump

时间:2024-09-29 12:30:40 出处:Comprehensive阅读(143)

Mitt Romney isn’t the only Senator who rang in 2019 by

publicly lambasting President Donald Trump

【was heidi van pelt on home improvement】What Does 'Amoral' Mean? Harry Reid's Trump Comment Gives Word a 4,300% Search Bump


.

【was heidi van pelt on home improvement】What Does 'Amoral' Mean? Harry Reid's Trump Comment Gives Word a 4,300% Search Bump


In a

【was heidi van pelt on home improvement】What Does 'Amoral' Mean? Harry Reid's Trump Comment Gives Word a 4,300% Search Bump


New York Times Magazine


interview


published Wednesday,was heidi van pelt on home improvement former Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) called Trump, “without question the worst president we’ve ever had.”


While these words might be familiar to many of president’s critics—a


2018


NYT


opinion piece


that surveyed 170 members of the American Political Science Association’s Presidents and Executive Politics section gave Trump the same moniker—Reid’s interview did introduce the masses to some new vocabulary.


“Trump is an interesting person, he is not immoral but is amoral,” Reid said, inspiring a 4,300% spike in looking up the word’s dictionary definition,


according to Merriam-Webster


.


????'Amoral' is up 4300% today. It's defined as "having or showing no concern about whether behavior is morally right or wrong."


https://t.co/3xWHqE4Jqy


— Merriam-Webster (@MerriamWebster)


January 2, 2019


Reid, who retired from the Senate on New Year’s Day in 2017, continued with a definition of his own, telling the


Times


, “Amoral is when you shoot someone in the head, it doesn’t make a difference. No conscience.”


(On the 2016 campaign trail, Trump did famously


tell supporters


, “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose voters.”)


While Merriam-Webster doesn’t give out raw data regarding how many people look up word definitions, associate editor and editorial ambassador Emily Brewster talked to


Fortune


about the 4,300% spike.


“It’s always interesting to us when a word spikes in lookups because a speaker or writer is calling attention to the word itself,” Brewster said in an email, noting, “Often a word will spike simply because it’s a relatively uncommon word that’s been used by someone with a large audience of readers or listeners.”


Brewster continued, “In this case, Reid was drawing attention to ‘amoral’ as it is distinguished from ‘immoral’—explicitly addressing a pair of words that offers a prime example of how replete the English language is with terms that cover the same basic territory while expressing distinct shades of meaning.”


According to the


dictionary’s blog post


on Reid’s statement, “A subtle distinction is made between the meanings of


amoral


and


immoral


that is connected with their classical prefixes:


amoral


denotes ‘without morals’ and


immoral


denotes ‘not moral’ or ‘against accepted morals,’ with the implication that, in the case of the latter term, expected standards are understood and breached, whereas, with


amoral


, expected standards of moral behavior are either unknown or unrecognized.”


Story continues


Merriam-Webster’s twitter often takes a satiric approach to political rhetoric and, more recently, political typos. In December, the social media savvy account garnered attention for calling out Trump’s twitter typo that mistook a “smoking gun” for a “smocking gun.”


“Democrats can’t find a Smocking Gun tying the Trump campaign to Russia after James Comey’s testimony. No Smocking Gun...No Collusion.”


@FoxNews


That’s because there was NO COLLUSION. So now the Dems go to a simple private transaction, wrongly call it a campaign contribution,...


— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)


December 10, 2018


Today in Spellcheck Can't Save You:


'Smocking' is a type of embroidery made of many small folds sewn into place.


https://t.co/3wbxPG24ne


— Merriam-Webster (@MerriamWebster)


December 10, 2018


Merriam-Webster takes both “smocking” and “mocking” very seriously.


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