Search Results
Search type | Search syntax |
---|---|
Tags | [tag] |
Exact | "words here" |
Author |
user:1234 user:me (yours) |
Score |
score:3 (3+) score:0 (none) |
Answers |
answers:3 (3+) answers:0 (none) isaccepted:yes hasaccepted:no inquestion:1234 |
Views | views:250 |
Code | code:"if (foo != bar)" |
Sections |
title:apples body:"apples oranges" |
URL | url:"*.example.com" |
Saves | in:saves |
Status |
closed:yes duplicate:no migrated:no wiki:no |
Types |
is:question is:answer |
Exclude |
-[tag] -apples |
For more details on advanced search visit our help page |
This tag is for questions seeking a phrase or an expression that fits a meaning. If you're specifically seeking only a single word, see the "single word requests" tag too.
3
votes
Phrase for a guest enforcing their culture/rules on the hosts
According to Dictionary.com, one definition of provincialism is the following:
narrowness of mind, ignorance, or the like, considered as resulting from lack of exposure to cultural or intellectual …
2
votes
Word/phrase for seeing something for the first time and being impressed
You could refer to it as the first thing that caught your eye.
Catch one's eye
Attract one's attention, cause notice, stand out, appear, fascinate, be conspicuous, be noticeable, be visible, be seen, …
0
votes
Word for "sewing clothing" that isn't gender-specific
I think this page on ApparelSearch.com might be helpful to you:
Clothing Makers - Fashion Terms of Interest to the Fashion Industry
From this list, here are the terms that seem to best fit what you're …
1
vote
Is there a term for a behavior irrationally linked to an outcome?
Operant conditioning is the term for when someone is trained (either deliberately or accidentally) to perform an action with the expectation that it will result in some sort of reward.
3
votes
Is there a word or expression for when someone passionately wants something, and then discov...
You could say it didn't live up to her expectations.
1
vote
How to describe an unsmooth hill?
You could call that flat place a ledge on the slope. One definition of "ledge" is "a flat surface that projects from a wall of rock." In your picture, the flat section certainly projects from the rock …
5
votes
Synonym for "Fellow Sufferers"?
There's the straightforward co-sufferer: "one who suffers with another." (Free Dictionary)
1
vote
What's an English idiom for "you can't observe without disturbing" that won't run afoul of s...
The observer-expectancy effect is when a researcher unintentionally changes the behavior of the subject(s) he or she is trying to observe.
Similarly, the Hawthorne effect is when subjects change thei …
5
votes
2
answers
405
views
How do you describe when a myth causes people to assume that something real is also a myth?
Is there a word or phrase for when something real is thought to be mythical because it resembles or is related to a known myth?
For example, the myth of unicorns makes many people think that narwhals …
17
votes
10
answers
7k
views
What word describes a person's worst flaw?
Is there a word or phrase to describe the worst flaw that someone has? The closest thing I have found to what I'm looking for is fatal flaw (technically called hamartia), but that's a bit too specific …
15
votes
5
answers
2k
views
Is there a term for when an allusion to a source becomes more well-known than the source its...
I’m looking for a word or phrase to describe when Source B quotes or references Source A, and then Source B becomes so much more well-known than Source A that people attribute the source of the quote …
14
votes
7
answers
15k
views
Is there a word or phrase for walking into a room to get something but then forgetting what ...
I'm fairly certain this has happened to all of us at some point: You go into a room to get something, but once you're there, you can't remember what you intended to get. It seems like a specific, comm …
31
votes
Accepted
Is there a word or term to describe when someone focuses on a specific example, rather than ...
Argument from fallacy could work. (It's also called argumentum ad logicam or fallacy fallacy, among other things.) Logically Fallacious, a database of logical fallacies, describes it this way:
Descri …
15
votes
What is deliberately using complex sentences to confuse people called?
You could say that the person is using sophistry (sometimes called sophism). Merriam-Webster defines sophistry as
the use of reasoning or arguments that sound correct but are actually false
a reaso …
0
votes
Is there a concise word or phrase for the feeling of being unsure if someone is kidding?
A phrase could be that you were "skeptical of his/her intent" or that you "weren't sure whether he/she was speaking literally or not."