deabbreviate

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English

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Etymology

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From de- +‎ abbreviate.

Verb

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deabbreviate (third-person singular simple present deabbreviates, present participle deabbreviating, simple past and past participle deabbreviated)

  1. (rare) To expand (an abbreviation).
    Synonym: (uncommon) unabbreviate
    • 1973, Alvin L. Gregg, Capturing Native Intuitions: A Criticism of the Chomsky-Halle Auxiliary Reduction Rules[1]:
      Simplified Main Stress Rule in Deabbreviated Form
    • 1994 March, Neil C. Rowe, Kari Laitinen, Semiautomatic Deabbreviation of Source Programs, Monterey, Calif.: Naval Postgraduate School, page 4:
      Deabbreviating means replacing an abbreviated name with a more understandable "natural" one consisting of whole English words. To deabbreviate, we "generate-and-test": We select candidates and abbreviate them various ways, trying to obtain a match with a given abbreviation.
    • 1999, A[hmed] Mushtaque R[aza] Chowdhury, “Foreword”, in AKM Ahsan Ullah, Abdar Rahman, Munira Murshed, Poverty and Migration: Slums of Dhaka City: The Realities, Dhaka: Association for Rural Development and Studies, →ISBN, page 7:
      To me there is no better way to define the slums than what the authors have done by deabbreviating SLUM (‘Sombre life of underprivileged mankind’).
    • 2002, Data & Knowledge Engineering, page 11:
      The first visualization construct is apt: it replaces three items (two arrows and the marker) by one item in a natural and clear-how-to-deabbreviate way.
    • 2007, Kirsty McKinnon, The Gift: A ‘How To’ for NLP with Real Life Experiences, Stanstead Abbotts, Herts.: MX Publishing Ltd, →ISBN, page 12:
      What is NLP? Can it be any broader a title? Indeed, what is it? I don’t actually think it makes it any easier to “deabbreviate” it – its[sic] Neuro Linguistic Programming.
    • 2008, Tom Dalzell, Terry Victor, Vice Slang, Abingdon, Oxon, New York, N.Y.: Routledge, →ISBN:
      STP [] Probably coined as an abbreviation of ‘serotonin triphosphate’ and as an allusion to the trademark name of a motor oil additive, and later deabbreviated to ‘serenity, tranquillity and peace’.
    • 2013, Rosa Rankin-Gee, chapter 14, in The Last Kings of Sark, London: Virago Press, →ISBN, page 96:
      Eddy had sent two messages, and at the end of the second the service de-abbreviated his LOL. ‘P.S. Chateaubriand pls,’ the computer voice said. ‘Laughing Out Loud.’
    • 2015, Robert B. Munson, Peacekeeping in South Sudan: One Year of Lessons from Under the Blue Beret[2], New York, N.Y.: Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN:
      I was asked to “deabbreviate the following,” which I did not understand until they pointed out the acronyms listed on the sheet below.