-
individuals or from a
social grouping or from
social norms. (See deviance.)
Gaffes and faux pas can be
labels for
certain instances of this kind of error....
-
further amplified the
impact of
political gaffes,
enabling rapid distribution and
increased scrutiny. A
political gaffe is a
remark or
action by a politician...
- re****tion for
making comments that some
media outlets perceived to be
gaffes. He
secured re-nomination for vice
president in 1992, but was
defeated by...
- pole.
Fishing activities that are
solely done with
gaffs are
known as
gaffing.
Gaffs are used when the
weight of the
target fish
exceeds the breaking...
-
April 2004. "Big Ron's big
gaffe[usurped]."
Accessed 30
August 2006. Webster, Nick. Mirror.co.uk. 18 July 2006. "Oops! More
gaffes you weren't
meant to hear...
-
Colemanballs is a term
coined by
Private Eye
magazine to
describe verbal gaffes perpetrated by
sports commentators.
Coleman refers to the
surname of the...
- Gabriƫl Steph**** "Gaffie" du Toit (born 24
March 1976) is a
South African rugby union footballer, who pla**** 14 test
matches for the
national team, the...
-
States Senate in 1972.
Biden is seen as a
figure with the
tendency to
commit gaffes. His
capacity for
empathy has been noted, as has his
tendency for exaggeration...
- his mouth".
Biden has a re****tion for
being prone to
gaffes, and in 2018
called himself "a
gaffe machine". The New York
Times wrote that Biden's "weak...
- or
conceal them from view of the
audience or camera, they are said to be
gaffed or gaffered.
Gaffer tape was
invented in 1959 by Ross Lowell, director,...