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term

/tɜːm/

When referring to a word or name, 'term' is used as a countable noun. When talking about agreements (like contracts), the word is almost always used in the plural form: 'terms'. For example, you say 'the terms of the agreement', not 'the term of the agreement'. As a verb, 'term' is quite formal. In everyday conversation, people usually prefer to use words like 'call' or 'describe'.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon, Sarah is hiding in the breakroom while Jessica is pacing her office.
Jessica

Did David actually specify a long-term contract or just a short term?

Jessica
Sarah
Sarah

He was super vague. I'm basically winging it until he signs something.

💡
Jessica is anxious about the project duration (using 'term' to mean a fixed period), while Sarah uses the idiom 'winging it' to describe performing a task without a clear plan or instructions, reflecting her exhausted and cynical attitude toward their boss.

Meanings

noun

A word or phrase used to describe a thing or to express a concept, especially in a particular subject of study.

"The medical term for the collarbone is the clavicle."

noun

A fixed or limited period for which something lasts.

"The president serves a four-year term in office."

noun

Conditions that are specified or agreed upon in a contract or agreement.

"Please read the terms and conditions before signing the document."

verb (transitive)

To give a name to someone or something; to describe using a specific word.

"The critics termed the new film a 'masterpiece of modern cinema'."

Examples

Look, I just don't understand this technical term at all!

Wait, is your term of office actually ending tomorrow?

I can't believe you're ignoring the terms of our lease!

Stop calling it a 'glitch'; I term it a disaster!

The school term is finally over, thank goodness.

Listen, these contract terms are absolutely ridiculous!

Is 'acute' the right medical term for this pain?

I wouldn't exactly term that a successful first date.

He's just finishing his second term as the board chair.

You can't just change the terms mid-game, man!

Collocations & Compounds

terms and conditions

The specific requirements and rules agreed upon in a legal contract.

midterm term

The middle period of an academic semester or political tenure.

technical term

A word used with a specific meaning within a particular profession or field.

fixed term

A predetermined length of time for a contract or appointment.

long-term

Occurring over or relating to a long period of time.

Idioms & Sayings

in the long term

Over a long period of time; eventually.

in the short term

Over a brief period of time; immediately.

on good terms

Having a friendly or cordial relationship with someone.

come to terms with

To gradually accept a sad or difficult situation.

terms of endearment

Words or phrases used to express affection for someone.

Cultural Context

The Long-Term Memory Paradox: How We Forge Our Identity Through Time

Human consciousness is fundamentally tied to our ability to store information over a long term. In the realm of neuropsychology, the distinction between short-term and long-term memory isn't just a technicality; it is the very mechanism that allows us to possess a coherent identity. While short-term memory acts as a fleeting scratchpadholding a phone number for ten seconds or a grocery list for a few minuteslong-term memory is the vast, architectural library of our existence.

What makes this truly fascinating is the process of consolidation. When a memory moves from a transient state to a long term storage system, it doesn't simply 'save' like a file on a hard drive. Instead, the brain physically rewires itself through long-term potentiation (LTP), strengthening the synapses between neurons. This means that every time you remember a childhood home or a first love, you aren't playing a video recording; you are reconstructing a neural path.

This reconstruction is where the 'paradox' enters. Because our memories are reconstructed rather than replayed, they are subject to change. Every time we recall a specific term from our past or a detailed event, we risk altering the original memory based on our current emotions and beliefs. We essentially rewrite our own history in real-time.

The psychological weight of this is immense. If we lost our long-term memoryas seen in severe cases of anterograde amnesiawe would be trapped in a permanent 'now,' unable to form new bonds or learn from mistakes. Our sense of self is not found in the present moment, but in the accumulation of these enduring traces. We are, quite literally, the sum of the information we have managed to keep for the long term, making our memories both the foundation of our sanity and a beautifully unreliable narrator.

Etymology

Derived from the Old French 'terme', which comes from the Latin 'terminus' meaning 'a boundary, limit, or end'. The evolution moved from a physical boundary stone to a temporal limit (period of time), and subsequently to the boundaries of language (a specific word used to define a concept).

Related Words

Last Updated: May 22, 2026Report an Error