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acronym |
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acronymWord formed from the initial letters and/or syllables of other words, intended as a pronounceable abbreviation; for example, NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), radar (radio detecting and ranging), RAM (random-access memory) and FORTRAN (formula translation). There are other forms of abbreviation. Many acronyms are so successfully incorporated into everyday language that their origin as abbreviations is widely overlooked. Full stops are not normally used in acronyms. acronym
acronym
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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They apply
labels to various types of names: initialized and acronymic names (IBM,
Alcoa), allusive names (the Mach3 razor), arbitrary names (Apple), and
the coined names currently in vogue (Agilent, Lucent). " McCollum
further commends Prince for his "clever use of the all-caps
'POP' (rather than just 'Pop') to allow for the
common acronymic interpretation 'Point Of Purchase,' an
inflection that offered a reference to the gallery as a site of economic
exchange. Smiley, the murderer, keeps the sheriffs
and other acronymic forces pinned down with an AKA and eventually the
house is burned to the ground. |
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