such modernisms as "blog," "bromance," and "steampunk"
modernist
/ˈmä-dər-ˌni-zəm/
noun
a practice, usage, or expression peculiar to modern times
a tendency in theology to accommodate traditional religious teaching to contemporary thought and especially to devalue supernatural elements
modern artistic or literary philosophy and practice; especially : a self-conscious break with the past and a search for new forms of expression
adjective
opposed to the values of modernism or modernity
… mixture of nativist ideology, anti-modernist sentiment, political isolationism, and frankly stated racialism …
adjective
extremely modern
characterized by a set of strategies developed in the early 20th century that include the control of the center of the chessboard by means of distant pieces rather than more centrally located pawns
What Murphy finds remarkable about SpaceX is its hypermodern corporate culture.