Appearance
Use device theme  
Dark theme
Light theme

How to use coined in a sentence

Looking for sentences and phrases with the word coined? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
Tamaki Saito, the psychiatrist who coined the term hikikomori believes there are more than a million cases.
Since I liked comparing Bahasa Malaysia with Bahasa Indonesia, I coined up a title for my paper.
I'd like to recommend The Word Spy, a fascinating website that collects recently coined words and phrases from the media.
Rush coined the term breakbone fever, based on the intense description of symptoms reported by one of his patients.
The United Nations coined the term megacity in the 1970s to describe metropolises with 10 million or more residents.
Shaulis can be considered the father of canopy management, although the term was not coined by him.
The term neoplasticism was coined by Mondrian's friend the Dutch mathematician and theosophist M.J.H. Schoenmaekers.
Rudyard Kipling coined the term, The Great Game, to describe one hundred and fifty years of intrigue, military adventurism, and espionage.
Rhine, by the way, is the person who coined the terms extrasensory perception and parapsychology.
And everyone has history-sheeters, that unique phrase coined in India simply because the world never felt the need for it.
One such technique is bibliotherapy which is a term first coined by Samuel Crothers many years ago.
The names, phot and stilb were likewise coined by Blondel and are in general use on the Continent.
Many of the newly coined words have their roots in Latin, a language unfamiliar to Bulgarian children.
Mark Twain claimed never to have coined a word as far as he knew, though historical dictionaries list him as the first user of many.
In this work he coined the now familiar term topological algebra but the thesis is memorable in other ways too.
He coined this latter term and employed the Greek letter lower case sigma to denote its population parameter.
Old words were being given new significance, and new words were being coined to meet new demands.
When the phrase was first coined the three estates of the body politic were the lords, the clergy and the commons.
This recently coined term describes bands that despite obvious rock influences produce music displaying a wider palette of musical styles.
He coined the terms morphallaxis and epimorphosis to describe the two major types of regeneration.
Show More Sentences
Examples from Classical Literature
The French had coined a name for the distemper and called it folie d'Afrique.
Found them so popular that he took on chinch bugs at a nickel, and fairly coined money.
Should this be unknown, a caption coined by the editors is placed in brackets.
Stoffel Brinkerhoff made great spoil of oysters and clams, coined and uncoined, and then set out on his return to the Manhattoes.
He was no more like the Chabert of the old box-coat than a cartwheel double sou is like a newly coined forty-franc piece.
This is a name the Australians coined for synthetic resin made from phenol and formaldehyde like Bakelite.
One given to sonorous and orotund phrases would doubtless have coined a most splendid speech here.
It was alive, vivified by her energy and coined into the daily action of her life.
For ease of description I have coined terms for the major divisions of the femoral and sciatic nerves.
This puts coined money out of the question, but nevertheless implies that the gold had been worked into ornaments of some kind.
The coined bronze is worth six times as much as the uncoined.
For this phase, Romanes has coined the term physiological isolation.
He coined sixpences for Ireland worth only fourpence in England.
Before the Revolution, each province had its own money of account though neither coined any but copper pieces.
Investors in coined gold normally pay a premium over the value of uncoined gold, which covers the cost of coining.
A useful term coined by poet Gail Mazur for Lowell's hundreds of late, unrhymed fourteen-line poems.
On the second, gold and silver wrought, unwrought, and coined.
Much German silver taken to England to pay for wool was then coined.
They are creative etymologies that focus on words that mean different, sometimes opposing things today than they may have when they were first coined.
There were Babus to whom Lurgan Sahib talked with austerity and authority, but at the end of each interview he gave them money in coined silver and currency notes.
Find more words!
Use * for blank tiles (max 2) Advanced Search Advanced Search
Use * for blank spaces Advanced Search
Advanced Word Finder

See Also

Nearby Words
6-letter Words Starting With
Find Sentences
go
Word Tools Finders & Helpers Apps More Synonyms
Copyright WordHippo © 2024