We may disapprove on cultural grounds _ the object of worship here is the almighty dollar _ but the extension of meaning is natural.
2.
It could be that the picture of a person with shoulders hunched forward would lead to the extension of meaning of " slovenly, ineffectual, " as Steinmetz now defines the Yiddish term.
3.
In the early 1980s, Jean-Claude Laprie thus chose " dependability " as the term to encompass studies of fault tolerance and system reliability without the extension of meaning inherent in " reliability ".
4.
That extension of meaning to " a repeated phrase " began about 1970, when The New Yorker wrote of a comedian, " He has an opportunity for some lovely comic riffs . " ( Use it, don't abuse it .)
5.
Chemists think of an " organized body " as an animal or plant containing compounds derived from hydrocarbons; they call that kind of chemistry organic and bristle at the " unscientific " extension of meaning into food " grown without chemical additives or genetic manipulation ."
6.
According etymonline it's never historically held such a meaning, but it feels like a perfectly cromulent extension of meaning to apply the word to " anthology collections of short stories, bound in one volume " http : / / www . etymonline . com / index . php ? allowed _ in _ frame = 0 & search = album talk ) 19 : 17, 5 October 2014 ( UTC)