• Doublespeak

    Origin

    double + -speak. Coined in the 1950s in the vein of George Orwell's Newspeak as used in his book . The word doublespeak does not appear in the book, although newspeak, oldspeak, and doublethink do.

    Full definition of doublespeak

    Noun

    doublespeak

    (uncountable)
    1. Any language deliberately constructed to disguise or distort its actual meaning, often by employing euphemism or ambiguity. Typically used by governments or large institutions.The report was riddled with so much corporate doublespeak that it was impossible to interpret.
      • 1976, Brent D. Ruben, The Coming of the Information Age, in Information and Behavior (Brent D. Ruben, ed.), page 7The popular and convergent use of information seems to represent something beyond the mere cosmetics of doublespeak, of a "garbage collector" turned "sanitary engineer" or a "strike" turned "work stoppage."

    Synonyms

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