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Conflation

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27: 202:("a kid") who is extraordinarily happy and excited, whereas the former brings to mind the image of a person ("a bull") who is extremely clumsy, indelicate, not suited to a certain environment, prone to act recklessly, or easily provoked. The conflation expresses both of these ideas at the same time. Without context, the speaker's intention is not entirely clear. 201:
Incongruent conflation occurs when the root expressions do not mean the same thing, but share a common word or theme. For example, "a bull in a candy store" can be formed from the root expressions "a bull in a China shop" and "a kid in a candy store". The latter expression paints a picture of someone
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as one, which produces errors or misunderstandings as a fusion of distinct subjects tends to obscure analysis of relationships which are emphasized by contrasts. However, if the distinctions between the two concepts may appear to be superficial, intentional conflation can be desirable for the sake of
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In this example, the bride may be married on a boat, airplane, or hot-air balloon, etc. She could be walking the aisle towards matrimony. The verb "float" has multiple meanings, and both verb meanings in the example may be proper uses of a bride "floating" toward a future. The "manner" of the scene,
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is the merging of two or more sets of information, texts, ideas, or opinions into one, often in error. Conflation is defined as 'fusing blending', but is often used colloquially as 'being equal to' - treating two similar but disparate concepts as the same.
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Congruent conflations are the more ideal examples of the concept. These occur when the two root expressions reflect similar thoughts. For example, "look who's calling the kettle black" can be formed using the root expressions "look who's talking" and
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Using words with different meanings can help clarify, or can cause real confusion. English words with multiple (verb) meanings can be illustrated by instances in which a motion is merged with or a causation with manner, e.g.
146:. But conflation of these two different concepts leads to the notion that all ideological ideas should be treated with respect, rather than just the right to hold these ideas. Conflation in logical terms is very similar to 189:
behavior. Of course, "look who's calling the kettle black" does not directly imply anything, yet the implication is understood because the conflation clearly refers to two known
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The Science of Linguistics in the Art of Translation: Some Tools from Linguistics for the Analysis and Practice of Translation.
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The Science of Linguistics in the Art of Translation: Some Tools from Linguistics for the Analysis and Practice of Translation
234:"A bird in the hand will get the worm...no, wait...The early bird is worth two in the bush...no... well, that's the idea." 224:
Mas vale pájaro en mano que Dios lo ayudará...no, no...Dios ayuda al que vuela como pájaro...no... bueno, la idea es esa.
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This was typical of the character, and he did it with several other expressions over the course of his comedy routine.
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In popular culture, identities are sometimes intentionally conflated. In the early 2000s, the popular American actors
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All conflations fit into one of two major categories: "congruent" conflations and "incongruent" conflations.
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is used both in the sense of recognizing a right and having high regard for someone or something. We can
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suggested this shift in usage happened relatively recently, entering their dictionary in 1973.
684: 323: 269: 185:". These root expressions really mean the same thing: they are both a friendly way to point out 644: 620: 600: 571: 518: 475: 432: 405: 354: 43: 94:). If these meanings are not distinguished, the result may be the following categorical 265: 673: 318: 308: 147: 87: 634: 614: 594: 313: 261: 91: 495: 452: 328: 131:
described by further context, would explain the true meaning of the sentence.
652: 628: 608: 186: 95: 79: 71: 67: 285: 273: 54: 211: 82:. For example, the word "bat" has at least two distinct meanings: a 34:, a heraldic emblem which displays conflated or "con-joined" images 190: 155: 50: 25: 375:"The Sometimes Subtle Difference Between 'Conflate' and 'Equate'" 540:"Inflation May Be Under Control, But Watch Out for Conflation" 99: 83: 664: 16:
Merging different sets of information, texts, ideas, opinions
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in certain situations. For example, the Mexican character
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Science and Religion: From Conflict to Conversation.
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press referred to them playfully as a third entity,
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Science and Religion: From Conflict to Conversation
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Science and Religion: From Conflict to Conversation
66:The result of conflating concepts may give rise to 246:" ("A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.") 86:, and a piece of sporting equipment (such as a 599:Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. 210:Idiom conflation has been used as a source of 53:, it is the practice of treating two distinct 431:. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 211–2. 284:In taxonomies, a conflative term is always a 8: 244:Más vale pájaro en mano que cientos volando 114:Therefore, some wooden objects are animals. 469:to rest or move in a liquid, the air, etc. 339: 690:Concepts in the philosophy of language 538:Sigman, Michael (September 10, 2010). 516: 473: 238:by combining two popular expressions: 134:In an alternate illustrative example, 596:Theoretical Approaches to Universals. 160:is the amalgamation of two different 128:the bride floated towards her future. 7: 428:Theoretical Approaches to Universals 253:" ("The early bird gets the worm.") 641:State University of New York Press 14: 425:Alexiadou, Artemis (2002-01-01). 564:Malone, Joseph L. (1988-01-01). 183:the pot calling the kettle black 144:holding this idea in high regard 98:, which may be seen as a joke ( 32:Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports 512:to move lightly and gracefully 1: 404:. Paulist Press. p. 14. 353:. Paulist Press. p. 13. 111:Some wooden objects are bats. 593:Alexiadou, Artemus. (2002). 251:Al que madruga Dios lo ayuda 570:. SUNY Press. p. 112. 62:Communication and reasoning 21:Conflation (disambiguation) 706: 633:Malone, Joseph L. (1988). 18: 619:New York: Paulist Press. 613:Haught, John F. (1995). 523:: CS1 maint: location ( 500:dictionary.reference.com 480:: CS1 maint: location ( 457:dictionary.reference.com 398:Haught, John F. (1995). 347:Haught, John F. (1995). 58:conciseness and recall. 379:www.merriam-webster.com 197:Incongruent conflations 140:respect someone's right 305:in regression analysis 142:to an opinion without 35: 268:were dating, and the 176:Congruent conflations 108:All bats are animals. 76:fallacy of four terms 29: 303:Confounding variable 298:Amalgamation (names) 280:Taxonomic conflation 216:El ChapulĂ­n Colorado 206:Humorous conflations 19:For other uses, see 639:Albany, New York: 324:Stemming algorithm 121:Logical conflation 36: 680:Concepts in logic 649:978-0-88706-653-5 625:978-0-8091-3606-3 605:978-90-272-2770-6 577:978-0-88706-653-5 438:978-90-272-2770-6 411:978-0-8091-3606-3 360:978-0-8091-3606-3 78:in a categorical 697: 582: 581: 561: 555: 554: 552: 550: 535: 529: 528: 522: 514: 509: 507: 492: 486: 485: 479: 471: 466: 464: 449: 443: 442: 422: 416: 415: 395: 389: 388: 386: 385: 371: 365: 364: 344: 74:, including the 705: 704: 700: 699: 698: 696: 695: 694: 670: 669: 661: 590: 585: 578: 563: 562: 558: 548: 546: 544:Huffington Post 537: 536: 532: 515: 505: 503: 494: 493: 489: 472: 462: 460: 451: 450: 446: 439: 424: 423: 419: 412: 397: 396: 392: 383: 381: 373: 372: 368: 361: 346: 345: 341: 337: 294: 282: 208: 199: 178: 170: 123: 64: 44:Merriam Webster 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 703: 701: 693: 692: 687: 682: 672: 671: 668: 667: 660: 659:External links 657: 656: 655: 631: 611: 589: 586: 584: 583: 576: 556: 530: 502:. 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Retrieved 378: 369: 349: 342: 319:Skunked term 309:Essentialism 283: 259: 256: 250: 243: 237: 229: 223: 209: 200: 187:hypocritical 179: 171: 154: 152: 148:equivocation 143: 139: 135: 133: 127: 124: 88:baseball bat 65: 48: 38: 37: 30:Flag of the 665:Conflations 314:Portmanteau 262:Ben Affleck 162:expressions 153:Deliberate 92:cricket bat 674:Categories 588:References 384:2022-07-23 329:Syncretism 218:once said 158:conflation 39:Conflation 685:Fallacies 96:syllogism 80:syllogism 72:ambiguity 68:fallacies 549:25 April 519:cite web 476:cite web 292:See also 286:polyseme 274:Bennifer 230:meaning 55:concepts 496:"Float" 453:"Float" 270:tabloid 136:respect 647:  623:  603:  574:  435:  408:  357:  191:idioms 335:Notes 212:humor 168:Types 156:idiom 51:logic 645:ISBN 621:ISBN 601:ISBN 572:ISBN 551:2011 525:link 508:2015 482:link 465:2015 433:ISBN 406:ISBN 355:ISBN 264:and 70:and 102:): 100:pun 90:or 49:In 676:: 651:; 643:. 627:; 607:; 542:. 521:}} 517:{{ 510:. 498:. 478:}} 474:{{ 467:. 455:. 377:. 288:. 276:. 193:. 150:. 580:. 553:. 527:) 484:) 441:. 414:. 387:. 363:. 249:" 242:" 226:" 222:" 181:" 23:.

Index

Conflation (disambiguation)

Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports
Merriam Webster
logic
concepts
fallacies
ambiguity
fallacy of four terms
syllogism
flying animal
baseball bat
cricket bat
syllogism
pun
equivocation
idiom
expressions
the pot calling the kettle black
hypocritical
idioms
humor
El ChapulĂ­n Colorado
Ben Affleck
Jennifer Lopez
tabloid
Bennifer
polyseme
Amalgamation (names)
Confounding variable

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