When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Corporate jargon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_jargon

    Corporate speak is associated with managers of large corporations, business management consultants, and occasionally government. Reference to such jargon is typically derogatory, implying the use of long, complicated, or obscure words; abbreviations; euphemisms; and acronyms.

  3. Psychobabble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychobabble

    The word "psychobabble" may refer contemptuously to pretentious psychological gibberish. Automated talk-therapy offered by various ELIZA computer programs produce notable examples of conversational patterns that are psychobabble, even though they may not be loaded with jargon. ELIZA programs parody clinical conversations in which a therapist ...

  4. Gibberish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibberish

    The theory was that gibberish came from the name of a famous 8th century Muslim alchemist, Jābir ibn Hayyān, whose name was Latinized as Geber. Thus, gibberish was a reference to the incomprehensible technical jargon and allegorical coded language used by Jabir and other alchemists.

  5. ChatGPT has meltdown and starts sending alarming messages to ...

    www.aol.com/news/chatgpt-lost-started-spouting...

    In another example, ChatGPT spouted gibberish when asked how to make sundried tomatoes. One of the steps told users to “utilise as beloved”: “Forsake the new fruition morsel in your beloved ...

  6. Fedspeak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fedspeak

    A public relations firm cites an example of "Greenspeak" as the statement of one of the "master practitioners of creative ambiguity over the years". The brief essay mentions two other master practitioners of obfuscation, Hubert H. Humphrey and Casey Stengel .

  7. Obfuscation (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obfuscation_(software)

    In software development, obfuscation is the practice of creating source or machine code that is intentionally difficult for humans or computers to understand. Similar to obfuscation in natural language, code obfuscation may involve using unnecessarily roundabout ways to write statements.

  8. Paraphasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraphasia

    Neologistic paraphasias, a substitution with a non-English or gibberish word, follow pauses indicating word-finding difficulty. [13] They can affect any part of speech, and the previously mentioned pause can be used to indicate the relative severity of the neologism; less severe neologistic paraphasias can be recognized as a distortion of a real word, and more severe ones cannot.

  9. Jargon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jargon

    Jargon then began to have a negative connotation with lacking coherent grammar, or gibberish as it was seen as a "broken" language of many different languages with no full community to call their own. In the 1980s, linguists began restricting this usage of jargon to keep the word to more commonly define a technical or specialized language use. [19]