I stand corrected, not. Strictly a political term, lol. That's not how language works. From your "hmmm" it is obvious you don't understand the term used in a political setting, much less outside of politics. Bye, Felicia.
Its origin may be political, but there is no grammar rule it can only be used in politics. I used it correctly; you simply don't have a full understanding of its meaning. Don't just "learn" knowledge of another. Assimilate it. Merge it with what you already know. Apply it in a variety of contexts.
Hmmm now you are trying to change the parameters of this conversation. Or 'changing the subject' as most people would call it.
Anyway 'shifting the overton window' is strictly a political term.
I stand corrected, not. Strictly a political term, lol. That's not how language works. From your "hmmm" it is obvious you don't understand the term used in a political setting, much less outside of politics. Bye, Felicia.
Yes its a political term and you used it incorrectly.
I mean you could easily verify this for yourself. Would take you 5 minutes.
Its origin may be political, but there is no grammar rule it can only be used in politics. I used it correctly; you simply don't have a full understanding of its meaning. Don't just "learn" knowledge of another. Assimilate it. Merge it with what you already know. Apply it in a variety of contexts.
No thats incorrect. "The overton window" is a political term with a defined meaning and cant just be used for anything you wish on any given day.
And it is absolutely not interchangeable with someone "changing the subject" during a conversation.