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A language construct, such as a word or a question, is said to be loaded if it carries meaning or implications beyond its strict definition (its denotation).Loaded words are words or phrases which have strong emotional overtones or connotations and which evoke strongly positive (or negative) reactions far beyond the specific meaning of the word which is listed in the dictionary.
Use of the phrase "loaded language" to describe the writing or speech of another implies an accusation of demagoguery or of pandering to the audience.
Some loaded language is used in ways that are deliberately ambiguous or even contradictory. Loaded language as an umbrella term is sometimes used to describe spin, euphemisms and doublespeak.
Examples of loaded words include:
- Democracy which used to have strong negative connotations (it was used as the word demagoguery is used today) and now has strong positive connotations throughout the western world. Many now consider anything "democratic" to be automatically "good" and anyone accused of being "anti-democratic" as automatically "bad".
- Discrimination which means to sort between but which has such strong connections to the discussion of racial and/or gender bias that the word's original sense has become almost unusable.
- non-sexist language, because it implies that failing to use non-sexist language is sexist
- both of the terms pro-life and pro-choice, because each implies that the other is anti- something, specifically that pro-life is anti-choice and that pro-choice is anti-life.
- Pro-Choice proponents accuse Pro-Lifers of using loaded language in their choice of the term partial birth abortion to describe the medical procedure dilation and extraction.
- Communism is often used as an insult without any understanding or regard to its actual meaning, and anything "Communist" is often automatically assumed to be bad.
- Propaganda, which literally refers to a specific type of message presentation aimed at serving an agenda, but which carries strong negative connotations of being deceptive.
- Clittorectomies are called female circumcision by people who approve of them and female genital mutilation by people who do not.
- A concentration camp is a term that literally just refers to a camp in which many people are "concentrated" in one area. There is nothing inheriently evil about the term, but is now seen as synonmous with the death camps of Nazi GermanyNazi Germany or the Third Reich commonly refers to Germany in the years 1933 1945, when it was under the firm control of the totalitarian and fascist ideology of National Socialism with Adolf Hitler as dictator. The term Nazi is a short form of the German.
These terms seem to arise most often in politics where they serve the purpose of propaganda.
Questions, on the other hand, are usually said to be loaded if they make a presuppositionIn Pragmatics ( Linguistics): Implicit assumptions about the world. They are required to make an utterance meaningful. Do you want to do it again (Presupposition: You have done it already, at least once. My wife is pregnant. Presupposition: I have a wife.. For example, the question "Do you still cheat on your taxes?" makes the presupposition that the subject of the question at one time did cheat on his/her taxes. Common examples of loaded questions arise in interviews where the interviewer wishes to make a biased statement while keeping a guise of unbiased journalismLiberal bias and conservative bias should both be merged and redirected to this article. Media bias is a real or perceived tendency of journalists and news producers within the mass media to approach both the presentation of particular stories, and the se.
Avoiding loaded language where possible is essential for keeping a neutral point of view.
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