Terminology
in sentence
62 examples of Terminology in a sentence
It is remarkable that some of the most critical concepts of Muslim religious
terminology
have now become part of the international language of current affairs.
The OED etymology ignores the non-English origins of the term, which can be found in the inventive linguistic
terminology
of continental European student radicalism.
The official verdict states that they threatened national unity, challenged those in authority, and incited public opinion against the state while using “foreign,” that is, Western,
terminology.
But one feature above all others captures the underlying problem: the yawning gap between the words of patients who speak their minds and the
terminology
of producers, experts, and authorities who mince words.
It makes little sense to declare war on a tactic, and experience has proven that the
terminology
merely reinforces the narrative that bin Laden seeks to promote, which is why Britain now avoids the phrase.
Journalists who ignore the guidance on
terminology
in this speech should be called – in private – by the Fed.
But international support for basic R2P principles remains strong, with the Council itself continuing to use “responsibility to protect”
terminology
in its resolutions and statements (26 times, at last count, since Libya).
In the
terminology
of modern leadership theory, Trump is deficient in emotional intelligence – the self-mastery, discipline, and empathic capacity that allows leaders to channel their personal passions and attract others.
Abe spoke repeatedly in the Australian Parliament earlier this month of Japan’s new “special relationship” with Australia –
terminology
normally associated only with the strongest of alliance partnerships – and followed his address by signing an agreement for the transfer of defense equipment and technology.
In the economist Hyman Minsky's terminology, simple “speculative" finance has given way to completely circular “Ponzi" activity.
For example, when priests leave “holy orders,” they are “reduced to the lay state” – a bit of condescending
terminology
that says a lot about the Church’s archaic mindset.
Without more precise terminology, the world’s democracies will have little hope of countering these states’ increasingly multifaceted influence.
But, sad to say, the only hope that I can see is something vaguely Leninist: in Lenin's terminology, if we made two steps backwards, one step was nevertheless made forward.
But such class-struggle
terminology
reminds people of the Cultural Revolution and, since such language would be unimaginable in inland China today, only makes Tibet seem more separate.
Indeed, the
terminology
of World War II is being deliberately revived.
Of course, ideology often overwhelms
terminology
on the left as well.
In the arcane world of international financial diplomacy, these subtle shifts in
terminology
matter.
The correction in US policy actually extends even to
terminology.
Indeed, many anti-Jewish outbursts in a number of countries are rooted in condemnations of Israel that exploit anti-Semitic
terminology.
The new
terminology
inspired by the information technology revolution was especially prevalent after the SARS outbreak last spring, when the government covered up the epidemic until after it had spread throughout China and beyond.
It is a little frustrating to those of us who have worked to embed R2P principles in international policy and practice that US leaders remain reluctant to use that
terminology
– a reluctance that partly reflects the perceived domestic political risk in relying on anything that comes from the UN.
The US has consistently supported the R2P norm in the Security Council (even if its leaders don’t like using this
terminology
domestically, believing that the American public doesn’t like international obligations of any kind).
This is neither a correct description nor a useful
terminology
for terrorist acts, which are more correctly described as criminal.
Long-term global-finance discussions have also made clear that, under certain conditions, regulation of capital flows (“capital-flow management measures,” in current IMF terminology) are warranted on “macroprudential” grounds – an understanding accepted by the G-20 at its 2011 Cannes meeting and by the IMF last year.
All these steps are taken by the AKP government because it is in Turkey’s interest, given not only its geopolitical position, but also its unique multi-ethnic structure (he didn’t use that terminology, though the implication was clear).
Even the
terminology
used to frame the discussion is wrong.
A better alternative would be to go back to John Maynard Keynes’s proposal of an overdraft (or, in IMF terminology, drawing) facility for all member countries, with countries that continue to use it eventually having to apply to a formal lending program.
It is an age, most tellingly, of proliferating new
terminology.
The
terminology
used back then – “backward,” “Third World” – betrayed a belief that under-development was a semi-permanent condition.
And so, at the press conference following the Singapore summit, Trump openly considered curtailing “expensive” US-South Korean military exercises, which he described using Kim’s own
terminology
(“wargames”).
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