: Drawing from the roots of "emphasis" and "emphatic," it represents the act of giving special importance or force to a specific idea. In communication, this means making a statement clear and forceful enough that there is no possibility for doubt.
In some accents (particularly American and Australian English), the unstressed syllable in "emphasis" can sound like "fə-sis." A non-native speaker or a young writer might phonetically spell what they hear: → emphliso. emphliso
Because one night, a child was born with strange eyes — a glint that looked past people, past walls, past the veil of the present. : Drawing from the roots of "emphasis" and
There are three plausible scenarios for encountering this keyword: Because one night, a child was born with
: It shares phonetic and contextual space with terms like "implement" and "exemplify". This suggests a focus on the transition from a theory or plan to a tangible, realized result.