I found a definition for evergreen listed under "law":
used to describe a legal agreement that will automatically renew (= start again) unless one of the people or businesses involved officially ends it:
evergreen clause/provision/agreement
An important goal for every agent is an “evergreen” clause which provides for continuing commissions after an agreement ends.
Evergreen letters of credit may be rolled over indefinitely until the issuing bank provides a written notice of its final expiration.
Not sure how this might relate, but Q did say non-standard defintion...
And I just accidentally mistyped definition right there, without the middle i :)....seems like a typo for Q too, there were several over the years
Should we then keep a lookout for posts related to Killary/evergreen that have an extra I somewhere? Might lead us to something if we keep our eyes peeled
What's the non-standard definition of Evergreen Q refers to
I found a definition for evergreen listed under "law":
used to describe a legal agreement that will automatically renew (= start again) unless one of the people or businesses involved officially ends it: evergreen clause/provision/agreement
An important goal for every agent is an “evergreen” clause which provides for continuing commissions after an agreement ends.
Evergreen letters of credit may be rolled over indefinitely until the issuing bank provides a written notice of its final expiration.
Not sure how this might relate, but Q did say non-standard defintion...
And I just accidentally mistyped definition right there, without the middle i :)....seems like a typo for Q too, there were several over the years
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/evergreen
/wordnerd
There's also evergreen content -- articles that don't get stale. For example, an article on how to grow roses.
Should we then keep a lookout for posts related to Killary/evergreen that have an extra I somewhere? Might lead us to something if we keep our eyes peeled
Nice catch. Saw that also.
Defintion is a some sort of weapon. Right?
Any etymology experts here?
RESEARCH WANTED