Tuesday, October 22, 2019
25 Favorite Portmanteau Words
25 Favorite Portmanteau Words  25 Favorite Portmanteau Words  25 Favorite Portmanteau Words                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  One of the many compensating charms of the often infuriating English language is the ease with which speakers and writers may exercise creativity and inventiveness. One of its most inventive components is the portmanteau word  one formed by combining two words into a single (and often deprecating and/or ironically humorous) term that denotes a new concept, or one for which a satisfactory term was heretofore unavailable. Here are twenty-five such terms, their parent words, and their meanings.  1. Affluenza (affluence/influenza): anxiety or dissatisfaction caused by submission to consumerism  2. Anacronym (anachronism/acronym): an acronym derived from a phrase no longer widely known (for example, radar)  3. Anticipointment (anticipation/disappointment): the letdown after hype gives way to reality  4. Backronym (back/acronym): a word presented as an acronym after the fact (for example, the name of the car brand Ford was derisively backronymed to stand for ââ¬Å"Fix Or Repair Dailyâ⬠) or mistakenly believed to be an acronym (the Morse code distress signal is erroneously said to stand for ââ¬Å"Save Our Soulsâ⬠)  5. Blaxploitation (black/exploitation): a genre of pulp entertainment  most prevalent during the 1970s, when African American culture began to permeate US society  that exploits clichà ©s about black people  6. Bodacious (bold/audacious): insolent or unrestrained, extraordinary or impressively large,  or extremely attractive  7. Celebutant(e) (celebrity/debutant(e)): someone famous for being famous, with no apparent talent except self-promotion  8. Chillax (chill/relax): behave, calm down, or relax  9. Cocacolonization (Coca-Cola/colonization): the aggressive introduction or pervasive influence of American consumerism on other cultures  10. Cosplay (costume/play): wearing costumes and accessories that resemble those of characters from various forms of popular culture, or the subculture that engages in cosplay  11. Craptacular (crap/spectacular): entertainment so poor in quality as to be ironically captivating, or hyped but ultimately disappointing  12. Edutainment (education/entertainment): educational material presented in a format intended to attract with its entertainment value)  13. Frankenfood (Frankenstein/food): genetically modified food  14. Frenemy (friend/enemy): a supposed friend whose actions and/or behavior are characteristic of a foe  15. Gaydar (gay/radar): the ability to identify a person as a homosexual based on observation of the personââ¬â¢s appearance and/or behavior  16. Ginormous (gigantic/enormous): huge  17. Infotainment (information/entertainment): information presented in a format intended to attract with its entertainment value  18. Interrobang (interrogative/bang): a combination question mark and exclamation point  19. McMansion (McDonalds/mansion): a blandly generic large house  20. Metrosexual (metropolitan/heterosexual): a man who appears to be inordinately concerned about personal aesthetics and/or is perceived for this quality as being homosexual  21. Mockumentary (mock/documentary): a feature film that spoofs the documentary form  22. Netocracy (Internet/aristocracy): an elite demographic distinguished by facility with technology and online networking  23. Screenager (screen/teenager): the typical adolescent who indulges excessively in screen entertainment  24. Sexploitation (sex/exploitation): pulp entertainment intended primarily to titillate  25. Shopaholic (shop/alcoholic): someone addicted to shopping  A portmanteau word, as described by Humpty Dumpty in Lewis Carrollââ¬â¢s Through the Looking-Glass, is (inspired by the word for a suitcase with two opposite compartments) a case of ââ¬Å"two meanings packed up into one word.â⬠ Many such terms, most of which are in the mainstream vocabulary  and some of which are not widely recognized as invented terms  already exist.  More mundane portmanteau words represent dual ideas in many contexts, including entertainment (cineplex, docudrama, infomercial), sports (heliskiing, parasailing, slurve), and technology (avionics, camcorder, pixel), as well as hybridization of breeds or species (cockapoo, jackalope, liger).  Some older examples include electrocution (electricity/execution), motel (motor/hotel), motorcade (motor/cavalcade), prissy (prim/sissy, though it may be simply a variation of precise), rollicking (rolling/frolicking), and ruckus (ruction, rumpus).                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:100 Whimsical Words50 Latin Phrases You Should KnowProverb vs. Adage    
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