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Smaller notebook computers, now euphemistically called " ultrabooks ", were thinner and smaller than ever.
CNN: How the Consumer Electronics Show lost its spark
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The bonanza is ultimately due to what is euphemistically called taxpayers largesse, which will only grow in time.
ECONOMIST: No demographic time bomb
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Counterinsurgency operations place a premium on different weaponry and tactics than would conflicts with what are now euphemistically called "peer" or "near-peer" competitors.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Gordon England��s war
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But exempting itself from losses in the event of what is euphemistically called "official-sector involvement, " or OSI, may not be that easy for the fund.
WSJ: Euro-Zone Bailouts Leave Public Creditors at a Loss
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But when it comes to "eve teasing" (as this practice is euphemistically called), I would argue the opposite: It is precisely the stubborn hold of India's prudish culture that has made many Indian men so callow.
WSJ: India Needs a Sexual Revolution
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In what are (sometimes euphemistically) called the developing countries, one year seems to follow the next without any booms or busts, just deadness in the water.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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In solitary -- also called "the box" and "the hole" by prisoners, or euphemistically, "segregation" and "special housing" by corrections officials -- inmates have virtually no social contact, except for occasional transactions with guards.
CNN: No kid should be in solitary confinement