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Weasel Words: The Dictionary of American Doublespeak (Capital Ideas Book) [Paperback]

Paul Wasserman (Author), Don Hausrath (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 21, 2005 1933102071 978-1933102078
Weasel Words: The colorful words that narrow the range of thought, inflate language, avoid responsibility, alleviate the discomfort of a waffling speaker, make the bad sound good, are at variance with the real or purported meaning, are a misnomer, euphemism, evasion, or are simply delightful forms of flim-flam identified by the two distortion detectives.

From A to Z––this hard-hitting, politically savvy dictionary takes on all those American evasions, put-on-holds, distortions, circumventions, obfuscations, and misleading terms that constantly besiege us in today’s “spinning” world, as well as popular catch phrases that simply annoy. Now when you listen to politicians, academics, bureaucrats, and television’s talking heads, or get sent on an endless round of recorded euphemisms on the telephone when you are trying desperately to get help or clarification––you’ll really understand what you are hearing.

The authors, both veterans of government and academia, provide a handbook for deciphering such weaseling jewels as:

· amicable often followed by agreement, meaning both sides were mutually disgruntled by the outcome
· economically disadvantaged for poor
· encore TV broadcast the rerun ad nauseum of previously broadcast television programs.
· episode a bureaucratic term used by governments and power companies to indicate a hazardous condition resulting in illness and death due to excessive pollution or radiation leaks.
· mild irregularity for the last unmentionable on TV, constipation.
· negative economic growth for recession.
· mobile home community for trailer park
· o.g.a. for “other government agency,” used by the military at overseas interrogation sites to indicate the Central Intelligence Agency
· sound science for anti-environmental policies that ignore scientific evidence.

The authors provide a guide to the rich and varied language of deception, evasion and cant threatening today’s society useful for students of English, business ethics, government and popular culture. They you and other connoisseurs of clear English and fed-up progressives to help them stamp out weasel words and get to the heart of what’s wrong with our society today––one “weasel word” at a time.


From A to Z––this hard-hitting, politically savvy dictionary takes on all those American evasions, put-on-holds, distortions, circumventions, obfuscations, and misleading terms that constantly besiege us in today’s “spinning” world. Now when you listen to politicians, academics, bureaucrats, and television’s talking heads, or get sent on an endless round of recorded euphemisms on the telephone when you are trying desperately to get help or clarification––you’ll really understand what you are hearing.

The authors, both veterans of government and academia, search for the real meaning behind such weaseling understatements of truth as:
· economic adjustment for recession when business is bad;
· broad abstractions for unacceptable ideas,
· preemptive counterattack for an attack on another country when U.S. allies might not agree with our policy;
· pre-owned for used when disguising the age of a car;
Weaseling politically correct euphemisms such as:
· economically disadvantaged" for poor when politicians are downplaying their needs; and
· sound science for anti-environmental policies that ignore scientific evidence.

The authors invite other connoisseurs of clear English and fed-up progressives to help them stamp out weasel words and get to the heart of what’s wrong with our society today––one “weasel word” at a time.

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Doublespeak Defined: Cut Through the Bull**** and Get the Point! $12.95

Weasel Words: The Dictionary of American Doublespeak (Capital Ideas Book) + Doublespeak Defined: Cut Through the Bull**** and Get the Point!
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Lexicon of gobbledygook is last word in clichés." -- Agence France-Presse, November 10, 2005

From the Publisher

An A-Z dictionary of 1200 terms that drive you mad in the "spinning" world of the media, government, business, diplomacy, and the general day-to-day business of living and working. This hard-hitting, politically savvy dictionary takes on all those American evasions, put-on-holds, distortions, circumventions, obfuscations, and misleading terms that constantly besiege us in today’s "spinning" world, as well as popular catch phrases that simply annoy. Now when you listen to politicians, academics, bureaucrats, and television’s talking heads, or get sent on an endless round of recorded euphemisms on the telephone when you are trying desperately to get help or clarification––you’ll really understand what you are hearing.

The authors, both veterans of government and academia, provide a handbook for deciphering such weaseling jewels as:

amicable often followed by agreement, meaning both sides were mutually disgruntled by the outcome economically disadvantaged for poor encore TV broadcast the rerun ad nauseum of previously broadcast television programs. episode a bureaucratic term used by governments and power companies to indicate a hazardous condition resulting in illness and death due to excessive pollution or radiation leaks. mild irregularity for the last unmentionable on TV, constipation. negative economic growth for recession. mobile home community for trailer park o.g.a. for "other government agency," used by the military at overseas interrogation sites to indicate the Central Intelligence Agency sound science for anti-environmental policies that ignore scientific evidence.

The authors provide a guide to the rich and varied language of deception, evasion and cant threatening today’s society useful for students of English, business ethics, government and popular culture. They, you, and other connoisseurs of clear English and fed-up progressives to help them stamp out weasel words and get to the heart of what’s wrong with our society today––one "weasel word" at a time.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 220 pages
  • Publisher: Capital Books (November 21, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1933102071
  • ISBN-13: 978-1933102078
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #838,121 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Funny and Enlightening!, December 22, 2005
By 
J. Hughes (Leesburg, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Weasel Words: The Dictionary of American Doublespeak (Capital Ideas Book) (Paperback)
"Weasel Words" defines words and terms used by politicians, the media, corporations, and PR pros that hide the true meaning of something. An example of a weasel word is presenteeism, which Paul Wasserman and Don hausrath define as when "your sick co-worker who insists upon coming to work sick."

This book is very funny. Anyone who loves words, keeping up with current events and politics, and likes to laugh will like this "Weasel Words."
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Almost 1200 examples of Weasel Talk, January 6, 2006
This review is from: Weasel Words: The Dictionary of American Doublespeak (Capital Ideas Book) (Paperback)
I commend Wasserman and Hausrath for calling attention to "weasel words." You hear them in political speeches, from educators and at times, even use them yourself (a preowned car is really a used car).

Wasserman, a professor emeritus at the University of Maryland College of Information Studies, and Hausrath, a colleague also with UM, try to pin down doublespeak. The intent of the doublespeak users often is to conceal reality under broad abstractions, understatements or even distortion. Instead of the word "recession," the weasel phrase "economic adjustment" is used. Compiled in dictionary form, this can be a reference book or something to browse just for the fun of seeing the gobbledygook that government and too many others use.

The Table of Contents gives you an idea of the coverage:

A Abdominal protector to Axis of evil

B B2B to Burn rate

C Cabinet to Czar

D Daddy Mac to Dysfunctional family

E Early adopters to Eyes Only

F Fabrication to The 411

G Gaming to Gun Control

H Hackademy to Hurry sickness

I I feel your pain to Issues

J Jack-booted government thugs to Juvenile delinquent

K Kickback to Known knowns

L L-word to Lulu

M Machers to My fellow Americans

N Nannygate to Nutraceuticals

O OBE to Ownership society

P PACs to Purple state

Q Quaint to Quick and dirty

R Racial Privacy to Rustbelt

S Safe house to Synergy

T T-group to Type T

U Ugly Americans to Utilize

V Vacation Specialist to Voluntary termination

W Wake-up call to Wuss

Y You can be the proud owner to Youthful figure

Z Z¿s to Zippies
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars encyclopedic, entertaining dictionary of words from politics, advertising, etc., February 22, 2006
This review is from: Weasel Words: The Dictionary of American Doublespeak (Capital Ideas Book) (Paperback)
You hear many of them all the time: dialogue, detainees, special event, free market, misspeak. But the authors collect numerous weasel words from government bureaucracy, the military, big business, and marketing, among other fields, that the general reader no matter how well read, is not likely to have heard of: drool-proof paper, hikikomori, MUF, helicopter parents, surgical safari. The author's define or explain each word and usually make a witty, Ambrose Bierce-type, comment on it. There's also a lot of familiar words from the news and political debate--e. g., welfare, downsizing, supply-side economics, price supports--which come in for definition according to their partisan political use. An entertaining guide to the culture and politics of the day.
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