How To Use Euphemism In A Sentence

  • There are so many euphemisms for the act of sexual congress.
  • The tale of the Fisher King involves a king who is lame in one leg (a euphemism for impotency) which in turn causes the land to become barren (infertile).
  • So excessive was the Roman horror of obscenity that even physicians were compelled to use a euphemism for _urina_, and though the _urinal_ or _vas urinarium_ was openly used at the dining-table (following a custom introduced by the Sybarites, according to Athenæus, Book XII, cap. 17), the decorous guest could not ask for it by name, but only by a snap of the fingers (Dufour, op. cit., vol. ii, p. 174). Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 1 The Evolution of Modesty; The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity; Auto-Erotism
  • However, the B.V.D. company coyly kept the origin of its trademark obscure - very few consumers knew just what the 'BVD' stood for, and once other underwear manufacturers entered the fray and began cutting into BVD's market share, more and more people were using 'BVD' as a euphemism for 'underwear' without even realizing that the term had originated as a brand name. New Urban Legends
  • Tax planning is a euphemism used by financial experts advising on legal ways to avoid tax. Times, Sunday Times
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  • Norman Solomon: Well, what goes by the term conservative is too often a sort of a euphemism for dog eat dog, whoever comes out on top, we believe in the survival of the fittest – a sort of perversion of Darwinism taken into a social realm, where generally, the predatory nature in the animal kingdom of one category of animal inflicted on another is sort of mimicked and replicated. Failed Conservative Values: Norman Solomon on Dog Eat Dog Greed
  • Euphemisms seem to be popular in the NOB culture, in general. 'Passing' in San Miguel
  • ‘Environmental design’ is just one of the many euphemisms for the ubertrendy catch words Feng Shui.
  • Charmed by his obliqueness - ‘doing’ and ‘getting’ as euphemisms for fundraising and boondoggling - I told him the name of my book.
  • In early 20th century Great Britain, anti-imperialist commentators and politicians were often thought to be affected by the parochial disease of "Little Englandism" -- foreign policy solely focused on the well-being of the British Isles at the expense of the empire -- essentially an euphemism for isolationism. Franz-Stefan Gady: H.G. Wells and Defending the "Restoration Doctrine"
  • Ratios are now commonly being used as euphemisms to express calamity.
  • All the usual euphemisms for death only postpone the obvious question. Times, Sunday Times
  • When Norman Mailer wrote his first novel, The Naked and the Dead, he used a euphemism -- "fug" -- for fuck. Paul Krassner: Remembering Norman Mailer
  • A simple chat with her could be downright frustrating when she didn't understand half of the euphemisms being used.
  • We have lots of euphemisms for menstruation, and we don't refer to it unless in the company of women, and rarely even then.
  • Facebook appears to be using the term "active" as a euphemism for "engaged" rather than how many users are actually going to its site every month. NYT > Home Page
  • Enter the newish euphemism for activist art, ‘tactical media.’
  • No. I've been thinking euphemisms like 'overcautious' and 'reluctance to risk bodily harm.' Crashlander
  • She wants to reclaim the word old and rejects euphemisms like elderly and seniors.
  • Indeed, it was uneasiness about shmuck that led to the truncated euphemism shmo - and any shmo knows what shmo comes from. March 2004
  • As one black ball in six is sufficient to exclude a candidate -- or, to use the official euphemism, to cause his "postponement" -- it is not difficult for the coterie that controls the club to keep it clear of all noisy, or even of merely too conspicuous, individuality. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 26, September, 1880
  • So Ford reached into that fuzzy bag of euphemisms and pulled out the word "adjustment. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • New Russian is a euphemism for black-market pimp, smuggler, gangster, any tough young man with capitalist cash, and there are lots of them.
  • As a child I thought a pound of flesh was a euphemism for his manhood, the kitchen not really a room but a dungeon of tepid, slick dishwater and never believed promises. Fighting Irish
  • Then the structures of euphemism are discussed in detail from three aspects:rhetoric, semantics and word-building.
  • We've already analyzed the Orwellian strategy behind the phrase "entitlement reform," which is a well-crafted euphemism for "cutting services for the elderly. Richard (RJ) Eskow: The Ministry of Truth: New Fronts in the War on Social Security
  • And now he's leading the struggle, armed with an acoustic guitar and a variety of euphemisms for the female reproductive system.
  • What objections does she raise about these euphemisms? Exploring language (6th edn)
  • I don't like euphemisms or euphemistic language.
  • The ad twice calls Harris "gutsy" -- a rather daring euphemism, in our view -- and it slams Nelson as a "do nothing liberal Senator. FL-SEN
  • And beyond just the unusual premise of controlling little computer people as they live, work, make friends, make potty, and make "woohoo" (the game's euphemism for getting to know someone in the biblical sense), the console version will have extensive tools for editing content and sharing it online with your friends. GameSpot's Array News, Screenshots, Movies, Reviews, Previews, Downloads, and Features
  • The bees, he announced, would be taken to "a farm in Connecticut," which, assuming this is not a euphemism, is hardly the worst summertime fate for a New Yorker, apiarian or otherwise. Alex Henry: An Apiarian Incident
  • If you look at how the distr cts and the circuits rule on FA and then how the Court rules, especially as the delicate right-left balance on the Court shifts, you see that his statements such as “no sensible” or “shockingly broad” are euphemisms for, “no sensible person would or should disagree with me-EV” or “this shocks me-EV”. The Volokh Conspiracy » Lawsuit Alleging that AIG’s Use of Sharia-Compliant Financing Violates the Establishment Clause Survives a Motion To Dismiss:
  • Euphemism is a very common and complicated linguistic phenomenon.
  • After all, ethnic slurs can start out as euphemisms (meant to avoid identifying anyone blatantly by nationality) before evolving into derogations.
  • Part of the fun of being young is deliberate contrarianism and the Fugs were so contrary that many publications wouldn't even print their name they borrowed from Norman Mailer's fornicatory euphemism in his WW II novel The Naked and The Dead. Michael Simmons: For The Benefit Of Tuli Kupferberg
  • Today, the line has been blurred, with deals coming in under the euphemisms of product integration, sponsorship and marketing partnerships.
  • His local education authority deals in euphemisms.
  • I didn't see who it was that barged into my dressing room but I told them to get out – and that may be a euphemism for what I actually said. Leicester City 2-2 Middlesbrough | Championship match report
  • Euphemism can be used in English to comfort, tolerate, deceive, construct, even iron and scorn.
  • They are 'slotted' or 'wasted' or 'blown away' or 'stopped' or 'dropped' - there are scores more euphemisms for the act of killing someone. Archive 2009-06-01
  • jazz being a colloquial euphemism for what I suppose the Westerner would call juju To google or not to google,a sense of deja vu and jazzed liberal democrats
  • Equally troubling are the myths of geographical entitlement that undergird the reprehensible euphemism of ‘ethnic cleansing’.
  • This clip of children gleefully shouting their favorite euphemisms for their bathroom ... dealings comes from the Sesame Street potty-training DVD Elmo's Potty Time. The Internet needs this
  • Oh, and I missed this: The courageous reporters of the social-democratic paper had gotten hold of a secret Nazi Party plan for the disposition of the Jews that first used what was to become the widespread euphemism for extermination: “Final Solution” (Endlössung), a word that left little doubt over the mass murder it euphemized. Matthew Yglesias » The Real German Resistance to Hitler: The Social Democrats
  • Not very, it seems; unless special is being used as a euphemism. Times, Sunday Times
  • It will be recalled that the Army, through unpredictable mischance, which is a euphemism for French defection, had lost all its equipment-tanks, guns, transport, and even rifles had gone. The Navy
  • I guess it's okay to say "dusky" as a euphemism for "darky. "Why is Obama so vapid and hesitant and gutless? Why, to put it another way, does he risk going into political history as a dusky Dukakis?"
  • He appeared his boldest; he was not one to speak in mild euphemisms.
  • Euphemisms," Mr. de Baca said, "give us an excuse to look away. Katherine Gustafson: Retail Takes on Slavery: The Body Shop Fights Child Sex Trafficking
  • That's his euphemism for the paunch so characteristic of many middle-aged, desk-bound executives.
  • This is not just a liberal euphemism for the city's ethnic diversity.
  • It's a euphemism for the Tarot major arcana, based on the myth that the Egyptian god Thoth's wisdom was written down in the eponymous book, for magicians to discover.
  • Part one discusses the cultural characters and cultural functions shared by taboo words, euphemism, and words for good luck.
  • But do not make the mistake of turning that advice into a euphemism to disguise your own comfort, calculation, lukewarmness, easygoingness, lack of idealism and mediocrity. Latest Articles
  • I have since heard through local gossip that these names are euphemisms for their nether regions. Times, Sunday Times
  • The term "early retirement" is nearly always a euphemism for redundancy nowadays.
  • I think alot of white American culture tends to sculk about cloaked in metaphors and euphemisms and dances around it's true feelings in ways they themselves don't even acknowledge to themselves. CNN Political Ticker
  • Part of the fun of being young is deliberate contrarianism and the Fugs were so contrary that many publications wouldn't even print their name they borrowed from Norman Mailer's fornicatory euphemism in his WW II novel The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • The courageous reporters of the social-democratic paper had gotten hold of a secret Nazi Party plan for the disposition of the Jews that first used what was to become the widespread euphemism for extermination: “Final Solution” (Endlössung), a word that left little doubt over the mass murder it euphemized. Matthew Yglesias » The Real German Resistance to Hitler: The Social Democrats
  • Taking that literally, they are likely to call chamberpot a euphemism for pisspot or shitpot; but is that really so? VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XII No 3
  • Euphemisms rather use understatement … indirectness … the language of diplomacy. Euphemisms are often misleading.
  • On the other hand, one person's comment refers to dulosis as ‘little better than a euphemism’.
  • GM's Rick Wagoner ostensibly stepped down at the president's "behest," a euphemism for Chicagotribune.com -
  • As I remember, it was shortly after the word gay became the euphemism for homosexual.
  • Sir John could be counted on not to speak in mild euphemisms.
  • Most things that suffered from "overhype" actually sucked, rather than "couldn't meet unrealistic expectations", which is just a euphemism for sucked. Too much hype?
  • This kind of thinking is why so many executives "backdated" options -- in quotes here because of the euphemism for options that are falsely dated. Stephen H. Baum: Advice from Grandma: 2007 Edition
  • In East Timor, he set up a highly effective “transitional administration”—yet another euphemism for protectorate—that shepherded the troubled region through exemplary elections to independence and a seat of its own in the UN for the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, the first newborn state of the twenty-first century. The Great Experiment
  • Pass away " is a euphemism for " die ".
  • Each drawn shoe is accompanied by a blunt euphemism from the history of conflict.
  • You even made that euphemism alert "busty" woman defiling the Cervelo RS worth reading about -- although I did nearly lose my lunch once I clicked through and realized your pixelated paint job of her flesh wasn't exaggerated. This Just In: BSNYC Posts on Saturday (and is quoted in the New York Times)
  • One senior European figure deeply involved in the discussions says the gravest fault was committed not in 2011 but in 2010: baking in private sector involvement—the euphemism for imposing losses on government bondholders—as a price for future bailouts. Europe's Leaders May Need History Lesson
  • By the use of that euphemism it is assumed you seek to address those lukewarm, apathetic or lapsed individuals who think as you do.
  • To sit at my desk thinking up new euphemisms for erections is not my idea of a relaxing afternoon. Times, Sunday Times
  • The term "progressive" in the context of income taxes is nothing more than a euphemism for unfair. Taxes for Revenue, Not Engineering
  • Putin, ex-KGB head, now leader of an atheistic evil empire, probably talks to himself in Russian,and Biden was roughly translating, using a euphemism suiting for the wsj. The Volokh Conspiracy » Jesus Christ!
  • A certain kind of Briton prefers circumlocution and euphemism for even everyday speech: ‘I wonder if I could trouble you for a glass of water?’
  • So far, the proponents have answered these questions by retreat into euphemism and advance into metaphor.
  • More on blissful ignorance: Finley complains that I use the term division of labor as a "euphemism" for social stratification. Name Calling
  • Euphemisms are confusing and lead to mixed messages and anxiety. Hollye Harrington Jacobs: Discussing Breast Cancer with Children
  • So far, the proponents have answered these questions by retreat into euphemism and advance into metaphor.
  • Everyday language uses a number of euphemisms, including polite formulas, circumlocutions, allusions, and stock phrases.
  • There is something a little disturbing in the use of the word convenience as a euphemism for the water closet. Flushed
  • The industry term for this is a triumph of spin-doctor euphemism: it's 'densification'. Times, Sunday Times
  • The pursuits and society of his youth scarcely could be denominated, in Troloppian euphemism, _la creme de la creme_; but they stood him in good stead; then and there was he trained for the encounter of Spain ... whilst sowing his wild oats, he became passionately fond of horseflesh .... George Borrow The Man and His Books
  • One of Trine's would-be selling points is its physics-based puzzles, but history has taught us by now that "physics-based" is often a euphemism for "capricious" - and that's the case here. Paste Magazine
  • ‘Fast-tracking’ is a crude euphemism for the abrogation of basic civil liberties and the rapid expulsion of asylum-seekers.
  • Did waterboarding, sleep deprivation and other "enhanced interrogation techniques," a phrase critics call a euphemism for torture, ultimately work? Reuters: Top News
  • Notably, the word ‘challenge’ was used as a euphemism to gloss over the existence of serious problems.
  • In what used to be called "lowballing" but now goes by the euphemism of "guidance," an analyst will guesstimate what a company will earn over the next year or calendar quarter. Why You Shouldn't Buy Those Quarterly Earnings Surprises
  • When describing performances, critics often use the word 'brave' as a euphemism for 'naked', and Fassbender and Mulligan are extraordinarily brave here in both senses of the word. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Just remember though: carefully chosen euphemisms can be a whole lot funnier.
  • Most of the remaining directors have since retired or now work in small private or family businesses, a euphemism for semiretirement. NYT > Home Page
  • ‘Those gentlemen in the bush’, were not gentlemen at all, but a euphemism for the hardened and ruthless warriors that Sarge had exchanged unpleasantries with before we had met.
  • He steeped himself in the venues that are defined by what we term jazz dance - a euphemism for dance shaped by the African-American experience.
  • Vouchers, which will likely be passed under the euphemism "tuition tax credits," will enable public money to be poured into private schools, public school teachers will be paid on the basis of how their students do on poorly written standardized tests, teachers will be allowed to enter the field with fewer requirements since everyone knows that experienced teachers in the new way of thinking are a liability. Randy Turner: Message to Missouri Schools: If They Don't Sound Like Us, Check Their Papers
  • Or they raise an eyebrow and gaze in the camera condescendingly, which is Lou Dobbs 'trademark euphemism when he has nothing valid to say. Michael Russnow: Lou Dobbs and His Ilk are Wrong: Why I Bought Stock Friday for the First Time in Years
  • Curiously, the word works as both dysphemism and euphemism: Americans were repelled in 1940 at the fictional account of lynching called The Ox-Bow Incident, but when Chinese Communist officials want to minimize what Westerners call “the massacre at Tiananmen Square,” they call that crushing of studentled protest “the incident of June 4, 1989” in Chinese, liu si, “six four”. The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • It's not that we skip over such stories, but that we tend to use euphemisms when telling them. Christianity Today
  • There are no euphemisms in Dutch for being old-for "golden ager".
  • Ziegler's 2006 painting, Study for Euphemism for Something, captures many of these apparent paradoxes: it features a cloudscape converted into CGI on an inkjet printout, then worked over by hand with correction fluid. Artist of the week 113: Toby Ziegler
  • Dodgy cops don't prove much use, but a hot young bun-steamer not a euphemism decides action is required. Revenge: A Love Story – review
  • To speak of "profit centers" in a business as we are wont to do is polite euphemism. THE ESSENTIAL DRUCKER
  • As euphemism, these clearly outdo themselves to the opposite extreme ( "dysphemism," as also in "greasy spoon" or "cancer stick"). VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VI No 2
  • Torture, with some prim modifications, continues under the euphemism "enhanced interrogation techniques". Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • This is for all those backstabbing phrases, euphemisms, sideswipes and digs. Mail and Guardian
  • Nowadays, curmudgeon is likely to refer to anyone who hates hypocrisy, cant, sham, dogmatic ideologies, the pretenses and evasions of euphemism, and has the nerve to point out unpleasant facts and takes the trouble to impale these sins on the skewer of humor and roast them over the fires of empiric fact, common sense, and native intelligence. April « 2008 « poetry dispatch & other notes from the underground
  • Privy and closet are examples of euphemism by metonymy, which is the substitution of the name of an attribute of a thing for the thing itself: a toilet is a private place, therefore a privy. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 4
  • The euphemism for low-budget independent movies at the time was “art” films. One From The Hart
  • All the usual euphemisms for death only postpone the obvious question. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thankfully the military has a kitbag full of euphemisms. Hugh Muir's Diary
  • Instead, they hide behind a wall of euphemisms, refusing even to use the word ‘disabled’.
  • By 1849 the discreet euphemism ‘dress-improver’ was in use, and by 1853 bustles were being made with rolls of crinoline (a mixture of horsehair and linen).
  • I never heard a shoeblack called a boot-finisher before, but I think the euphemism was allowable in a young lady who wishes to exalt the commercial status of her intended.
  • This is not just a liberal euphemism for the city's ethnic diversity.
  • Tax planning is a euphemism used by financial experts advising on legal ways to avoid tax. Times, Sunday Times
  • Euphemism can be used in English to comfort, tolerate, deceive, construct, even iron and scorn.
  • After finding the "washroom" (Polar Star is a Canadian ship), I continued my Drake Passage Initiation with a short and sweet session of "technicolor yodeling" (a euphemism for vomiting coined, I believe, by WAI guides Russ and Scott). TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • My builds are getting more and more 'slapdash' and 'elegantly sloppy' euphemisms for crap since Arcadia is not around to point out the flaws in them. Arcadia Asylum's inventory... it's gone: asset server issues are calamities
  • She wants to reclaim the word old and rejects euphemisms like elderly and seniors.
  • Napoa had not had a peaceful night’s sleep at the camp, confessing that she knew from her dreams that she was still “roaming everywhere,” a euphemism for carousing with her coven. Spellbound
  • He followed with a montage of euphemisms applied to Rahm by a pantheon of talking heads, who described him as "bombastic" and "brusque," said he "isn't afraid of breaking a little china," and "isn't a shrinking violet. On 'Daily Show,' Stewart Nails Rahm Emanuel, Chicago Politics
  • The term countryside was a euphemism at best; most of the nearby land had been torn up under the claws, hooves, and feet of the participants. LEGENDS OF THE DRAGONREALM
  • To sit at my desk thinking up new euphemisms for erections is not my idea of a relaxing afternoon. Times, Sunday Times
  • While I'm not in favor of euphemisms (My favorite is "zaftig", by far), "heavy" and "big" are accurate terms. Original Signal - Transmitting Buzz
  • It was like a euphemism for a dirty word, he'd rather people'd just said the word than try to make it seem nicer.
  • That antelope was chased down by the Office of Clutch and Keep, staggering all over—up the library steps, music building parking lot, into/out of the Office of Euphemisms for Falling. University of X
  • To speak of "profit centers" in a business as we are wont to do is polite euphemism. THE ESSENTIAL DRUCKER
  • Post-cold-war subjects have been inserted into the curriculum, such as "countermine operations," to instruct Central American soldiers on clearing the 130,000 mines laid during the wars of the 1980s, and "resource management," a euphemism for teaching Latin officers to keep their hands out of the till. Running A 'School For Dictators'
  • Discuss the role of euphemisms in disguising something that is inherently bad.
  • It has a huge number of synonyms, ranging from coy euphemisms to joking proxies, to coarse vulgarities.
  • Obeying the dictates of modesty, they usually preferred discreet euphemisms or a blushing silence.
  • It's not that we skip over such stories, but that we tend to use euphemisms when telling them. Christianity Today
  • But lacking sparkle is often a euphemism for pleasing modesty. Times, Sunday Times
  • Maybe a long association with the poor is to blame, possibly its familiarity as a playground euphemism or just the fact that it is impossible to eat one with any degree of decorum (its less familiar name "periwinkle" comes from the old English for "winding mussel"). Travel news, travel guides and reviews | guardian.co.uk
  • Huang mother - in - law face a cash reward, Yao master euphemism refused.
  • shrinkage is the retail trade's euphemism for shoplifting
  • bruin, meaning "the brown one" as a euphemism, and then bruin segued into bear. TIME.com: Top Stories
  • How can 'contact' — that remarkably underpowered euphemism — ever be described as easy? Times, Sunday Times
  • shrinkage is the retail trade's euphemism for shoplifting
  • Pass away " is a euphemism for " die ".
  • Your suggested euphemisms - e.g. 'web 2.0' and 'social web' aren't workably apt since, more and more, it isn't just about "the web" but includes mobile (non-web, thnk txtng) & sharing content / experiences etc outside of the web, e.g. email (remember?!) Advertising Age - Homepage
  • Here, as elsewhere, the language of the mob and of public opinion have converged: there is no restraint; there are no euphemisms.
  • Ten years earlier, “submission”—as in, submission to the states for ratification—had been the euphemism congressional drys had used in place of the scarier “Prohibition.” LAST CALL
  • The contention that "all of the people of Canada" should benefit from the inequitable distribution of mineral and other resources is at best a political euphemism for centralized control of fiscal policy, and hence the ultimatum in Mr. Turner's budgets of last May and November. The Incredible Resource Battle
  • Chinese Web users frequently use "harmonize" as a euphemism for censorship. Chinese Video Takes Aim at Online Censorship
  • To speak of "profit centers" in a business as we are wont to do is polite euphemism. THE ESSENTIAL DRUCKER
  • Such mild, culinary euphemisms muffled and camouflaged the enforced famines and the murders of millions.
  • The word privy is one of the earliest euphemisms used in England; an anonymous writer at the turn of the fifteenth century advised VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol XIX No 4
  • By 1849 the discreet euphemism ‘dress-improver’ was in use, and by 1853 bustles were being made with rolls of crinoline (a mixture of horsehair and linen).
  • I particularly hate it when people are allowed to resign, unchastened, with euphemisms about gardening and spending more time with their families.
  • Pass water'is a euphemism for'urinate '.
  • It depends on the context and whether you can use a euphemism. Times, Sunday Times
  • It would appear that "strategist" is now an euphemism for somebody in their cups. Pink elephants on parade
  • Tax planning is a euphemism used by financial experts advising on legal ways to avoid tax. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such crushing euphemisms as 'plain' and 'homely' fail utterly to capture her unattractiveness. Times, Sunday Times
  • Euphemisms are a quick fix for a debate context, but they breed distrust of even the most benign ideas.
  • There must be appropriate minimums, and proper grading according to proper marks - with a clear outcome, unobscured by imprecise euphemisms.
  • Pushing 60 but still displaying the sensibility of a naughty schoolboy, Waters displays a real penchant for smutty innuendo and an ever growing catalogue of euphemisms.
  • The word dishabille (from the French déshabillé 'undressed', which still refers to a negligee) uses a common euphemism for nudity to refer to being partially or very casually dressed, a matter of comparison with the fashion-sensitive 'proper' dress, not to an actual revealing characteris - tic of the 'lesser' garments worn. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • The regime calls the detention ‘protective custody,’ a euphemism for incarcerating dissidents without trial for an indefinite period.
  • This was the war that popularized the term "ethnic cleansing," a euphemism for the forced transfer of populations purely on the basis of their ethnic background or religion. News
  • Two weeks after that first article appeared, I learned in the business pages of The Port Frederick Times that Cain Clams had fired—“released” was the euphemism employed by the vice president—one-third of its employees “in an effort to solve our cash-flow problems.” I. O. U.
  • While at first glance it appears to suffice, it's actually just another bad euphemism in a growing list of hackish politics-as-sports metaphors intended to deflect criticism and exculpate the news media when it clearly fails to effectively hold accountable our elected officials. Bob Cesca: Cable News Debate Coverage Is Hurting Democracy
  • It depends on the context and whether you can use a euphemism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rhetorical devises are various, but those which operate in the increasing process are simile or metaphor, personification, metonymy , euphemism, garble and alias.
  • There are always patsies and enablers who surround the worst leaders, who flatter them with euphemisms and heroize them with outright lies. Jan Herman: Mr. Patsy Pundit
  • Nature is an outcry, unpolished truth; the art-a euphemism-tamed wilderness. Dejan Stojanovic 
  • After kissing the subject, he just tapers off, equivocates, engages in euphemism.
  • All of the above poppycock is a mere euphemism; for hate the black president. CNN Truth Squad: No eye care until you're blind in one eye?
  • Modern report cards, it said, were in fact a tapestry of evasions and euphemisms designed to bolster children's self-esteem and ensure they do not get caught in a culture of failure.
  • That's a polysyllabic euphemism for a one party state.
  • As my comment made abundantly clear, in some contexts, consideration of sexual preference is a factor of "ability to do the job" rather than of "prejudice or bigotry" assuming, arguendo, that we accept the concept of "intersexed" - which I take it is a euphemism for "transgendered" rather than hermaphrodite. Get ready for the government to look at you with X-ray eyes.
  • And a nice day to you too - the drought hasn't yet broken out in forest fires; one of the local does has triplets and her efforts to wean them are comical to everyone but the indignant fawns; the horsemint is out and aphrodite fritillaries are thronging it - although I have to say that 'throning' is kind of a euphemism for what the wanton butterflies are actually doing to those stamens and pistils. A Saturday coffeehouse.
  • Decode the neologisms and euphemisms and you gain a rare insight into the strategists' true intentions.
  • Similarly, the terms native or indigenous are often euphemisms for what used to be termed primitive.
  • Our awareness of the euphemism is shown by our tendency to laugh at what we regard as false pretension.
  • Her alibi, offered by her apologists, is that she was starved of affection - a euphemism for sex.
  • Perhaps "erasing your bookmark" is yet another euphemism for "foffing off," and the commenter is actually posting in flagrante suffoco pullus. Keeping Up Appearances: Filling the House, Clearing the Bike Lane
  • Women are more likely to use polite euphemisms for topics such as death and sex.
  • Holder explains that labeling a word or expression as euphemistic or dysphemistic is, of necessity, subjective; ‘one woman's euphemism is another man's dysphemism.’
  • It's not that we skip over such stories, but that we tend to use euphemisms when telling them. Christianity Today
  • Wallace calls Gingrich's failure to launch a "hash" and Stirewalt agrees, saying that Gingrich is typically seen as "brilliant but undisciplined," which is a euphemism for the way Gingrich like to get married and then boink other ladies. TV SoundOff: Sunday Talking Heads
  • The euphemism crossed the ocean when they came home. Flushed
  • Euphemism and dysphemism - Language is used as shield and weapon.
  • But a recent desire for euphemism by Procter and Gamble strikes me as a possible exception to my rule.
  • Not very, it seems; unless special is being used as a euphemism. Times, Sunday Times
  • Xerox Subsidy - Euphemism for swiping free photocopies from one's workplace.
  • Both the buyer and the seller understand that lying - the euphemism is "bluffing" - is part of the game; thus neither side gains an unfair advantage when it lies about the selling price or the purchase price. NPR Topics: News
  • Sometimes, tornadoes in our area are referred to by euphemisms like ‘intense vorticular clouds’, ‘freak wind storms’, and so forth.
  • Everyday language uses a number of euphemisms, including polite formulas, circumlocutions, allusions, and stock phrases.
  • As a practical matter, the current legal regime substitutes palliative euphemisms for useful controls on police discretion.
  • Though the "glitches" --- the new media euphemism for massive breakdowns --- were numerous, the outcome was not unexpected. Ohio 2004 election thief grabs Gov nod while (surprise! surprise!) voting machines malfunction
  • Promoted to Headline (H3) on 5/10/09: 'Sleep deprivation': Euphemism and CIA torture of choice yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = '\'Sleep deprivation\': Euphemism and CIA torture of choice '; yahooBuzzArticleSummary =' Article: "Sleep deprivation," as used by the CIA in its enhanced interrogation program included being shackled to the floor and ceiling for days on end, adding to the torment. 'Sleep deprivation': Euphemism and CIA torture of choice
  • Ten years earlier, “submission”—as in, submission to the states for ratification—had been the euphemism congressional drys had used in place of the scarier “Prohibition.” LAST CALL
  • R'Dessler's strong form forces the community to "reinterpret" (my euphemism) prior generations actions / thoughts to be consistent with current daat torah (don't confuse me with the facts, my mind's already been made up). Hirhurim - Musings
  • Such interest in the UK might be perceived as flattering if it were not for the fact that acquisition is often followed by downsizing, rightsizing, or whatever the latest euphemism for job cuts happens to be.
  • Perhaps the treatment of reformers like Mirdamadi and Abdi explains why some of the gerogan-girha tend to speak in stilted euphemisms, even when they are discussing events now a quarter of a century old. Among the Hostage-Takers
  • Nazi victories in Europe had the effect of stimulating Japanese ambitions even further; after the fall of France Japan occupied northern Indochina and signified its desire to establish a “coprosperity sphere” throughout eastern Asia—a euphemism for Japanese hegemony. Interpretations of American History

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