ACRONYMS
Words have meaning:
Search your Acronyms or Acrostics below
Words have meaning:
Search your Acronyms or Acrostics below
1. C.E.L.L = Creating Energy and Lasting Leverage
2. D.E.B.T. = Devalued Earnings = Belt Tightening (doyled)
3. F.E.A.R. = for most people, means False Evidence Appearing Real,
while for others it is a victory cry for Fail Early And Responsibly.
4. G.A.P. = Grind Against Progress (doyled)
5. H.O.P.E. = Helping Others Prosper Efficiently (doyle) through
Team Vision’s “The New 72-Hour Rule” or
Honing Opportunity into Prosperity with Enthusiasm (doyled)
6. J.O.Y. = Jubilant Optimism is Yours (doyled)
7. L.I.F.E. = Living In the Forefront of Eternity (doyled)
8. L.I.T.E. = Leaders In Training Enter first (doyled)
9. L.O.V.E. = Leveraging the Opportunity for Victory in Eternity (doyled)
10. L.U.C.K. = Laboring Under Correct Knowledge
11. R.I.C.H. = Residual Income Creates Happiness
12. S.Y.S.T.E.M. = Save You Stress Time Energy Money
13. T.I.M.E. = Taking In the Moment to Evolve (doyled)
14. Y.E.S. = Say yes to - Your Eventual Success! (doyled)
15. P.O.O.R. = Permit Others to Obfuscate your Reason (doyled)
2. D.E.B.T. = Devalued Earnings = Belt Tightening (doyled)
3. F.E.A.R. = for most people, means False Evidence Appearing Real,
while for others it is a victory cry for Fail Early And Responsibly.
4. G.A.P. = Grind Against Progress (doyled)
5. H.O.P.E. = Helping Others Prosper Efficiently (doyle) through
Team Vision’s “The New 72-Hour Rule” or
Honing Opportunity into Prosperity with Enthusiasm (doyled)
6. J.O.Y. = Jubilant Optimism is Yours (doyled)
7. L.I.F.E. = Living In the Forefront of Eternity (doyled)
8. L.I.T.E. = Leaders In Training Enter first (doyled)
9. L.O.V.E. = Leveraging the Opportunity for Victory in Eternity (doyled)
10. L.U.C.K. = Laboring Under Correct Knowledge
11. R.I.C.H. = Residual Income Creates Happiness
12. S.Y.S.T.E.M. = Save You Stress Time Energy Money
13. T.I.M.E. = Taking In the Moment to Evolve (doyled)
14. Y.E.S. = Say yes to - Your Eventual Success! (doyled)
15. P.O.O.R. = Permit Others to Obfuscate your Reason (doyled)
Acronym defined:
An acronym (pronounced AK-ruh-nihm, from Greek acro- in the sense of extreme or tip and onyma or name) is an abbreviation of several words in such a way that the abbreviation itself forms a pronounceable word. The word may already exist or it can be a new word. Webster's cites SNAFU and radar, two terms of World War Two vintage, as examples of acronyms that were created.
According to the strictest definition of an acronym, only abbreviations that are pronounced as words qualify. So by these standards, for example, COBOL is an acronym because it's pronounced as a word but WHO (World Health Organization) is not an acronym because the letters in the abbreviation are pronounced individually. However, opinions differ on what constitutes an acronym: Merriam-Webster, for example, says that an acronym is just "a word formed from the initial letters of a multi-word name."
Frequently, acronyms are formed that use existing words (and sometimes the acronym is invented first and the phrase name represented is designed to fit the acronym). Here are some examples of acronyms that use existing words:
BASIC (Beginner's All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) NOW (National Organization for Women) OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards).
Acrostic defined:
An acrostic (Greek: ákros "top"; stíchos "verse") is a poem or other form of writing in which the first letter, syllable or word of each line, paragraph or other recurring feature in the text spells out a word or a message[1]. As a form of constrained writing, an acrostic can be used as a mnemonic device to aid memory retrieval.
According to the strictest definition of an acronym, only abbreviations that are pronounced as words qualify. So by these standards, for example, COBOL is an acronym because it's pronounced as a word but WHO (World Health Organization) is not an acronym because the letters in the abbreviation are pronounced individually. However, opinions differ on what constitutes an acronym: Merriam-Webster, for example, says that an acronym is just "a word formed from the initial letters of a multi-word name."
Frequently, acronyms are formed that use existing words (and sometimes the acronym is invented first and the phrase name represented is designed to fit the acronym). Here are some examples of acronyms that use existing words:
BASIC (Beginner's All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) NOW (National Organization for Women) OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards).
Acrostic defined:
An acrostic (Greek: ákros "top"; stíchos "verse") is a poem or other form of writing in which the first letter, syllable or word of each line, paragraph or other recurring feature in the text spells out a word or a message[1]. As a form of constrained writing, an acrostic can be used as a mnemonic device to aid memory retrieval.