Wikipedia neologism

A neologism is a neologism evidenced in its introduction to a language by edits on .
This usage is to be distinguished from the observation that words beginning with the stem "wiki-" are themselves neologisms following the model of software developer Ward Cunningham's WikiWikiWeb, formed from “wiki,” a Hawaiian language adverb meaning “fast,” followed by various English, Greek or Latin suffixes.
==" neologisms" 2006==
The term " neologisms" is itself a neologism. In 2006 at the 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence, ECAI, a paper was presented on an automated system called Zeitgeist to track neologisms with WordNet from :
Zeitgeist seeks out neologisms based on a formal blend of two different lexical inputs following the work of linguist Gilles Fauconnier and literary scholar Mark Turner (1998)
Policy

Walt Crawford in Balanced libraries: thoughts on continuity and change (2007) notes that in "there's a general reluctance to add articles based on neologisms primarily used by bloggers unless the terms are well established". This is documented by Broughton (2008), and Ayers, Matthews, Yates (also 2008).
Wiktionary
Wiktionary's inclusion criteria differ from 's.
From edits, to articles, to print, back to sourced references
Projects such as Books LLC of Philip M. Parker harvest and reprint text from articles which can appear on Google Books and then can be cited as circular references. Again, users generally seek to prevent this happening. A more natural example would be where a neologism is not picked up, or where duplicates a neologism already existing on blogs and self-published websites before it occurs in print, and is then sourced back to .
Possible examples of circular references, " neologisms" (per Veale), or blog-to- neologisms:
* "crowdsourcing"
* "performativity"
* "folksonomy"
* "Greek primacy"
 
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