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Orwell

[ US /ˈɔɹˌwɛɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. imaginative British writer concerned with social justice (1903-1950)

How To Use Orwell In A Sentence

  • In Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell, the "telescreen" compulsorily present in every house is not only a television broadcasting from the outside, but a sort of CCTV camera, observing the people in the room, shouting at them if they fail to meet the standards ordained by the state of which Big Brother is the dictator, always watching them. Telegraph.co.uk: news business sport the Daily Telegraph newspaper Sunday Telegraph
  • Only one paragraph before he tells us this, he claims that Orwell had lapsed from socialism into an apolitical brand of liberalism.
  • When are Orwells sheep ever going to figure out the jingoist crap, mere words, are being used to make rubes of them? Think Progress » Minnesota Attorney General Denies Pawlenty’s Request To Challenge Constitutionality Of Health Reform
  • In the first - the Orwellian - culture becomes a prison, whereas in the second - - the Huxleyan - culture becomes a burlesque.
  • Imagine George Orwell, only with slightly different political opinions and in a really bad mood.
  • Over the last two decades, predictions about the social effects of the Internet have ranged from cybernetic anarchy (both utopian and distopian) to the instantiation of a fascistic regime of surveillance that would make Orwell look like a piker. Discourse.net: I'll Be Speaking in London on Nov. 17
  • Orwell argued that in a time of universal deceit the only revolutionary act is to tell the truth.
  • In a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act. George Orwell 
  • Now we were very keen to hear the thoughts of some of the Orwell Award nominees, but our offers were largely declined.
  • It still gratifies us today to read George Orwell: we feel ennobled by him.
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