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"On each side, some phrases are looked on as loaded language."
Confronted with questions about the loaded language of his report, Starr told the committee it was "a professional product."
Loaded language is often used by news broadcasters as a propaganda technique.
Examples of loaded language are "You want to go to the mall, don't you?"
Their song titles and lyrics aroused controversy by usage of loaded language.
Instead, there is loaded language and the ominous mood-setting photography favored by news magazines.
Perhaps Irvine's loaded language was in response to the imbalance of the swap (or "scheme").
Such loaded language is anathema in New York.
It is thus often viewed as loaded language, and is primarily used by certain bioconservatives to justify their position.
Used seriously, such loaded language can lend false support to an argument by obscuring a fallacy of meaning.
Terminology relating to such issues often takes the form of loaded language which contrasts with the pejorative terms used in reference to opponents.
Instead, RickK, as an admin, should have explained why loaded language and going off topic are violations of policy.
According to Lakoff, Republicans are skilled at using loaded language, along with constant repetition, to play into the frames in our unconscious minds.
The term "loaded question" is sometimes used to refer to loaded language that is phrased as a question.
But should supposedly objective people like news reporters, people like Eric Engberg, use that kind of loaded language?
But the gardeners of Hoyt Street quickly discovered that loaded language can be riddled with oversimplification and distortion.
One aspect of loaded language is that loaded words and phrases occur in pairs, sometimes as political framing techniques by individuals with opposing agendas.
Psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton defines "loaded language" as a technique used in brainwashing.
"That's mighty loaded language, Paul," Michelis said.
Emotive arguments and loaded language are particularly persuasive because they exploit the human weakness for acting immediately based upon an emotional response, without such further considered judgment.
Euphemism is an attempt to avoid loaded language with undesirable connotations, but it often introduces new loaded language.
Politicians cultivate loaded language, and often study how to use it effectively: which words to use or avoid using to gain political advantage or disparage an opponent.
In the 1946 essay Politics and the English Language, George Orwell discussed the use of loaded language in political discourse.
The San Francisco Chronicle notes that the film is "marred by loaded language and a propagandistic tone that undercuts rather than promotes its purposes."