Essay sample library > Weasel Words

Weasel Words

2024-02-20 13:29:23

Please use "mischievous words" to modify sentences and to weaken the true meaning and power. This may result in being able to say anything without harming others or being at risk from the opposite.

If you use it categorically, those weaknesses will often disappear (this is not what you said, but how do you say that?)

This word is to express the true figure while protecting the speaker from attack and legal remedy. They are very common in advertising and marketing, and their goal is to attract people rather than make them think about them.

Itachi sucks eggs through small holes and makes the egg appear intact but, of course at the moment there is no real worth.

• Doodle Since information on many advertisements and commercials is ambiguous, it seems that they are pursuing promises and something. However, if you look closely at the message, you can see that the business protects itself by using cunning words (weak words) in the message. It has some sample messages including cunning vocabulary (Sly word is italicized). Manufacturers may change the original product in some way to wake up the interest in the product again. (It will change packaging from time to time.) And the new advertising campaign claims that the product is new and improved:

Using a nasty word to not make a thorough claim is synonymous with tergiversate. A nasty word may mean that it goes far beyond the actual requirement. In the word "embarrassing", there is some form of unobtrusive to alleviate the potential load and the power of other controversial sentences, such as using detectors such as "some" or "in most respects" I also use expressions.

In the last few weeks I have met many religious views with what I call cunning. In the entry of this term of Wikipedia, "anonymous authority" and "It is intended to give a specific or meaningful sentence impression, but in fact it is simply posting ambiguous sentences" It is. "Doodle words can be used in advertisements and political statements, which may help to mislead the audience." Crazy things