Search for crossword answers and clues
Deviser of "double-think"
Answer for the clue "Deviser of "double-think" ", 6 letters:
orwell
Alternative clues for the word orwell
Word definitions for orwell in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 1519 Housing Units (2000): 660 Land area (2000): 1.663821 sq. miles (4.309276 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.663821 sq. miles (4.309276 sq. km) FIPS code: 58856 Located within: Ohio ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Orwell is a small, lazy-evaluation functional programming language implemented principally by Martin Raskovsky and first released in 1984 by Philip Wadler during his time as a Research Fellow in the Programming Research Group , part of the Oxford University ...
Usage examples of orwell.
From 1930-36 he edited the Adelphi and met Orwell as a young contributor.
Comrade Orwell, former fellow-traveller of the pacifists and regular contributor to the pacifist Adelphi -- which he now attacks!
Jack Common (1903-68), writer and editor, had met Orwell around 1930 through the Adelphi and had remained a friend.
Orwell records the incident in his first draft of Down and out with Huge Rune.
The same method was used by Orwell for indicating omissions when abridging excerpts he was quoting in reviews and essays, but as we have not made cuts in any of these excerpts there should be no confusion between our cuts and Orwell's own.
Orwell was really a hypnotist, and that she hypnotized Klaus in order to get ahold of the Baudelaire fortune.
Orwell even set a date: 1984 -- and the most disturbing revelation that emerged from last year's Watergate hearings was not so much the arrogance and criminality of Nixon's henchmen, but the aggressively totalitarian character of his whole Administration.
Orwell hypnotized Klaus and caused that terrible accident, didn't she?
To quote Orwell, 'All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.
The world will then be much as Orwell predicted in Nineteen Eighty-four.
Perhaps I ought to try and give expression to what many of us pacifists feel about Germany in relation to ourselves, since Mr Orwell brings up this point.
It would seem that Orwell himself shows to a surprising degree the overlapping of left-wing, pacifist and reactionary tendencies of which he accuses others!