coining
English
editPronunciation
editVerb
editcoining
- present participle and gerund of coin
Noun
editcoining (countable and uncountable, plural coinings)
- (uncountable) A form of alternative medicine from Southeast Asia where a coin is rubbed vigorously on a patient's oiled skin.
- (countable, linguistics) A created word or phrase.
- 1783, Hugh Blair, edited by George Edward Griffiths, The Monthly Review[1], volume 68, Art. V. Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres., page 499:
- Poetry admits of greater latitude than proſe, which with reſpect to coining, or, at leaſt, new-compounding words; yet, even here, this liberty ſhould be uſed with a ſparing hand.
- 1989, G.H.R. Horsley, “The Greek Documentary Evidence and NT Lexical Study: Some Soundings”, in New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity[2], volume 5, →ISBN, page 77:
- Once we move into the Patristic period, there is undoubted evidence for new coinings of words (particularly compounds) as a response to the needs of the theological debates which occurred.
- 2009, Kristin Denham, Anne Lobeck, “Morphological Typology and Word Formation”, in Linguistics for Everyone: An Introduction[3], →ISBN, page 194:
- Coinings or neologisms are words that have recently been created. […] True coinings, which are completely new words, are rather rare relative to the vast number of words we create by means of the other word formation processes.
Translations
edita form of alternative medicine where a coin is rubbed vigorously on a patient's oiled skin
a created word or phrase
|