so-called
so-called — adjective
1. placed before a noun to indicate that the label or description being used for a
placed before a noun to indicate that the label or description being used for a person or thing is probably wrong or undeserved
The so-called 'luxury' apartment had no hot water on the first night.
so-called + noun in scare quotes for irony
A so-called financial expert on television could not explain basic interest rates.
Jin's so-called friends stopped visiting once he moved to a smaller house.
The company's so-called green policy still allows single-use plastic packaging.
Asher called a plumber, but the so-called professional left the pipe leaking.
- alleged
stronger suggestion of wrongdoing or accusation; 'so-called' questions the accuracy of the label, while 'alleged' questions the truth of a claim
- ostensible
formal register; describes the apparent reason or purpose that may hide the real one
- self-styled
implies the person gave themselves a title or description without outside recognition
文法句型
so-called + [doubtful/ironic noun phrase]
用法筆記
Always placed directly before a noun. The noun that follows typically carries an ironic or questioning tone — the writer is signalling that the label does not match reality.
常見錯誤
2. placed before a term or expression to show that it is a label used by a particul
placed before a term or expression to show that it is a label used by a particular group, and may not be familiar to the listener or reader yet
The textbook introduces 'fractals' — a so-called term for infinitely repeating geometric patterns.
so-called + new term, followed by explanation
In programming forums, 'prompt engineering' is a so-called skill that every recruiter looks for.
The travel blog described 'slow tourism,' a so-called phrase for taking unhurried local trips.
Indra wrote an article about 'quiet quitting,' a so-called expression that became popular online.
Emily learned that 'neurodiversity' is a so-called term for different thinking styles.
- so‑called
this sense is the neutral counterpart to the disapproving sense 1; in context, the tone is explanatory rather than doubtful
文法句型
so-called + [unfamiliar term / newly coined word]
用法筆記
Often followed by a comma or dash and an explanatory phrase that defines the unfamiliar term. The term in quotation marks is the new word being introduced.