Coined
in sentence
142 examples of Coined in a sentence
That nickname for the ACA,
coined
by the Republicans when the law was enacted in early 2010, was intended to be derogatory, and their opposition to the program seemed to be vindicated in that year’s midterm elections, when they swept both houses of congress.
The term was
coined
in 2010 by Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, to criticize successive rounds of so-called quantitative easing by advanced countries’ central banks, which sent capital fleeing to developing countries in search of higher yields, driving up these countries’ exchange rates in the process.
Clinton – the most “establishment” of the contenders – has proposed introducing what is known as the “Buffett Rule” (named for the billionaire Warren Buffett, who
coined
the term), establishing a minimum effective tax rate for high earners.
Munger
coined
the term “febezzle,” or “functionally equivalent bezzle,” to describe the wealth that exists in the interval between the creation and the destruction of the illusion.
The first term was
coined
by Reagan’s budget director, David Stockman.
But that does not alter my point that the more Paul Krugman talked about the “confidence fairy” – a term he
coined
after Osborne became Chancellor to ridicule anyone who argued for fiscal restraint – the more business confidence recovered in the UK.
Down with “Emerging Markets”LONDON – It has been nine years since I
coined
the acronym “BRIC,” which has become synonymous with the rise of Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
Building Up the BRICSMANCHESTER – This year’s meeting of the BRICS in India is taking place just a fortnight after the 15th anniversary of the creation of the term “BRICs,” which I
coined
to refer to the major emerging economies: Brazil, Russia, India, and China (South Africa was added in 2010).
Defining Diplomacy DownNEW YORK – Some 25 years ago, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a Harvard professor who in the course of his career served as United States ambassador to the United Nations and a US senator from New York,
coined
the phrase “Defining Deviancy Down.”
By the 1990’s, British Euro-skeptics
coined
the term “Anglosphere” to describe a model that was more successful and more expansionary than that of the EU.
Consider the Brazilian officials who
coined
the phrase “currency wars” in 2010.
In his influential 1997 essay “The Rise of Illiberal Democracy,” Fareed Zakaria
coined
the term to describe countries that hold elections (of varying fairness) to choose their leaders, yet at the same time restrict civil liberties and democratic freedoms.
In the agreement hammered out by Mr. Deng and Mrs. Thatcher in the early 1980s, Britain appears to have gained some guarantees about the continued existence of Hong Kong’s freewheeling capitalist economy even under Beijing’s rule (‘one country, two systems’ is the vague, if celebrated, expression
coined
by Mr. Deng).
(The fascist organization that the Western media calls ISIS – a name that confers on it Islamic credentials – is more likely to be called Daesh in the Islamic world, a name
coined
by my brother Khaled, who was in jail with me in the 1980s.)
Apart from those ideologues, the first to grasp the significance of Thatcher’s political project were on the far left: the magazine Marxism Today
coined
the term “Thatcherism” in 1979.
The importance of this “greenhouse effect” has been known in science since the nineteenth century, when Joseph Fourier
coined
the term.
Part of the reason for Swensen’s success is “absolute return,” a term – now widely quoted in the investment community – that he
coined
for unusual investment strategies involving such things as merger arbitrage and distressed securities.
At best, Europeans could be America’s “cleaning ladies,” to use the indelicate analogy
coined
at the time by some neo-conservative thinkers during George W. Bush’s first term in office.
Historically, an important spur toward corporatist thinking was Gustave Le Bon’s 1895 book The Crowd, which
coined
the terms “crowd psychology” and “collective mind.”
The Cost of America’s Free LunchBRUSSELS – For decades, the world has complained that the dollar’s role as global reserve currency has given the United States, in a term usually attributed to Charles de Gaulle but actually
coined
by his finance minister, Valery Giscard d’Estaing, an “exorbitant privilege.”
The term "open society" was
coined
by Henri Bergson, in his book The Two Sources of Morality and Religion (1932), and given greater currency by the Austrian philosopher Karl Popper, in his book The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945).
The threshold for exposure is no longer wrongdoing of the scale that
coined
the term “Watergate” and all the subsequent “-gates.”
But the term “Islamofascism” was not
coined
for nothing.
Nearly 12 years ago, Jim O’Neill, then the chief economist for Goldman Sachs,
coined
the term “BRIC” to describe the “emerging markets” of Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
Then in 2011, massive protests against Putin and his party of “crooks and thieves” erupted, and Alexei Navalny, who
coined
that epithet, became the face of Russia’s opposition.
“Economic patriotism,” the slogan
coined
by France’s Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin following PepsiCo’s rumored attempt in July 2005 to takeover Danone, perhaps best encapsulates the political imperative.
The influential German journalist Ludwig von Rochau, who
coined
the term Realpolitik, described the new German mood on the eve of Otto von Bismarck’s last war of unification.
The N-11 never acquired the cachet of the BRIC acronym, which I
coined
in 2001 to describe a bloc of emerging economies (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) that stood to have a significant impact on the world economy in the future.
James Carville, a campaign strategist for President Bill Clinton (who benefited from his own Southern-infused Kennedy-like charm),
coined
a phrase – “It’s the economy, stupid” – so catchy that it is frequently invoked to this day.
What the World Needs from the BRICSCAMBRIDGE – In 2001, Goldman Sachs’ Jim O’Neill famously
coined
the term BRIC to characterize the world’s four largest developing economies – Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
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