diplospeak

English

Alternative forms

Noun

diplospeak (uncountable)

  1. Diplomatic language; The careful use of euphemism and noncontroversial language to obscure points that might cause contention.
    • 1994, Newsweek - Volume 124, Issues 10-18, page 134:
      And he knows how to cut through the diplospeak: when Clinton politely asked Russia's Boris Yeltsin for his views on a Caspian Sea gas deal proposed by Chevron Oil.
    • 2001, Jose Armilla, Negotiate with Feng Shui, page 124:
      The hard-driving Cushing carried the title of "American Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary" — diplospeak for President Tyler's man on the spot.
    • 2008, John E. Owens, John Dumbrell, America's "war on Terrorism":, page 245:
      Following his August 2007 talks with President Bush in Washington, Brown fell back on coded diplospeak in their joint press conference.
    • 2018, Michael McFaul, From Cold War to Hot Peace:
      I defended our policy with journalists and critics, one night engaging in a “frank exchange of views”—to use the diplospeak I would later master as a U.S. ambassador —with Washington Post columnist Bob Kagan and New York Times columnist David Brooks on the merits of our approach.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.