Rickwad – A person who alleges to be a religious Christian but upholds guidelines that point out under other circumstances. - The Washington Post Neologism Contest The Washington Post organizes an yearly contest in which newspaper readers are requested to give in optional definitions to existent words. The results are in many cases highly entertaining. Here are samples of Washington Post neologisms ("54 Great Examples of Modern-Day Neologisms," 2011): Frisbeetarianism (n.), the creed that when you pass away, your spirit travel through the air onto the exterior upper covering of a building and unable to move there. Pokemon (n), a follower of Rastafarianism doctor of proctology. Abdicate (v.), to stop trying the expectation of ever having a flat tummy. …show more content…
Gargoyle (n.), olive- seasoned liquid for rinsing the mouth. Flatulance (n.) ambulance that picks you up after you are trample by a road roller. Esplanade (v.), to try to explain something while intoxicated by alcohol. Testicle (n.), an amusing query on a test. Flabbergasted (adj.), shocked at how much weight you have got. Circumvent (n.), an aperture in the front of men's underwear which are loose-fitting and shaped like shorts dressed by Jewish male people. As it is familiar that neologisms are lexicons and the expressions produced for ideas of governmental, scientific or usual nature, designed on word-arrangement motives reacting in language and regulations or taken of other languages. On the construction and a method of creating neologisms in the newspaper language are demonstrated by a number of alternatives. The most distinctive methods of arrangement of neologisms in the English newspaper language is word-arrangement (a constitution, conjunction, alteration), alteration of familiarity of words and loan from other languages. Every one of them has the characteristics so they should be taken apart