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Definition 2025
weasel_word
weasel word
English
Noun
weasel word (plural weasel words)
- (pejorative) A word used to qualify a statement so as to make it potentially misleading.
- 1900. Century Magazine, quoted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins by Robert Hendrickson (New York: Facts on File Publications, 1987)).
- Weasel words are words that suck all of the life out of the words next to them just as a weasel sucks an egg and leaves the shell.
- May 31 1916, Theodore Roosevelt, speech delivered in St. Louis, MO:
- Now, you can have universal training or you can have voluntary training, but when you use the word 'voluntary' to qualify the word 'universal', you are using a weasel word; it has sucked all the meaning out of 'universal'. The two words flatly contradict one another.
- 1900. Century Magazine, quoted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins by Robert Hendrickson (New York: Facts on File Publications, 1987)).
Synonyms
- (word used to qualify a statement): hedge
Hypernyms
- (word used to qualify a statement): qualifier
Translations
A word used to qualify a statement so as to make it potentially misleading
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Verb
weasel-word (third-person singular simple present weasel words, present participle weasel wording, simple past and past participle weasel worded)
- To use weasel words.
- 1979, Peter Straub, Ghost Story
- Now Sears looked down at the person fate had put closer to him than anyone else in the world, and knew that Ricky was thinking that he had weasel-worded his way out of the last question.
- 1979, Peter Straub, Ghost Story
See also
- Category:English hedges