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Word: jargonized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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According to Smith, Signorino fielded questions in a very confident and mature way, and did not "fall into the trap of using statistical jargon...

Author: By Rebecca A. Butcher, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ph.D. Student Lands Tenure-Track Position | 9/29/1997 | See Source »

Simplify Your Life with Kids is straightforwardly written, without gimmicks or jargon, and shows some familiarity with the real world. In all this it is an atypical self-help book. Stephen Covey, on the other hand, has the format down cold. His genius is for complicating the obvious, and as a result his books are graphically chaotic. Charts and diagrams bulge from the page. Sidebars and boxes chop the chapters into bite-size morsels. The prose buzzes with the cant phrases--empower, modeling, bonding, agent of change--without which his books would deflate like a blown tire. He uses more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NOW THEY WANT YOUR KIDS | 9/29/1997 | See Source »

...sick of the theory jargon, at least you'll have the music to fall back on. Radano says he will incorporate music into his lectures, require listening to tapes and will even include some coverage of the current hip-hop scene. In what other class could you find a textbook with mention of Bobby McFerrin, Peabo Bryson, Boyz II Men and the Pointer Sisters...

Author: By Geoffrey C. Upton, | Title: ELEVEN ELECTIVES | 9/12/1997 | See Source »

...grown tired of 12-person classes where unfinished reading and awkward attempts at in-class discussion became central to my education. I chose Harvard over smaller colleges in order to move with the "masses" from one lecture hall to another. I wanted amplified professors to spoonfeed me their jargon...

Author: By Ben A. Loehnen, | Title: First-Year Seminars Remove Anonymity | 9/8/1997 | See Source »

...Dave, whatever happened to gear ratios? This new GM-speak can strike outsiders as numbingly programmatic. At GM's technical and design center in Warren, Michigan, for example, the walls are a marketspeak mural of arrows, block charts, one-word product descriptions and macro boxes of jargon like "needs target," "needs profile," "benefit focus" and "reason for being." Go inside GM's design studios, and its artists work under Brave New World banners exhorting them to remember what their 2000-era cars and trucks are supposed to represent. Flying above one such future vehicle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GM GETS SET TO HIT THE ROAD | 4/14/1997 | See Source »

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