He said it was a symptom of what he called, "nounism," a way to describe something or someone in a way that is an absolute. A chair is a chair. It's not chair-ly, or chair-ish. In the same way, Trump has defined Hillary as crooked - not her actions or her behaviour, but her.
Since his ascendance to the top of the Republican presidential field, Trump has been attempting to create a permanent class of winners and losers as determined by him, Sherman has concluded.
"He's able to do it with intransigent certainty," Sherman said. "The content is secondary. He's a master at this stuff - it's a permanent quality he sticks to you. And it's a tar baby - it sticks to you the more you fight it."
People generally don't like ambiguity, yet much of political debate is nuanced without a clear cut right or wrong. Yet Trump's declarations and designations are presented as hard facts. Things just are.
A recent study published this year by a team of psychologists actually analyzed this style of political speech. In it they determined that conservative politicians use nouns in making their points more often because the part of speech can "satisfy psychological needs for order, stability and predictability."
The study was borne out of a hypothesis that right-leaning pols are "less likely than leftists to consider multiple, potentially contradictory viewpoints." So to "convey greater permanence" they use more nouns. If someone is regarded a "loser" it is part of their fundamental nature, not a passing trait.
John Jost, a New York University psychology professor and one of the co-authors of the study, told Tom Edsall, who writes a weekly opinion column in the New York Times, that part of Trump's appeal to voters is how the candidate addresses everything with "tremendous self-confidence and 100 per cent certainty, which some people find impressive and reassuring."
In other words, he leaves little wiggle room for debate or contradiction.
Mazarin R. Banaji, a psychology professor at Harvard, has also studied the use of noun phrases to create a sense of permanence. It's the difference of calling someone a chocolate-lover versus saying someone loves to eat chocolate. The former is a more concrete description. She said its called "essentialising," which is psychology speak for coming to see a "trait or quality as an essential and indisputable feature."
She said everyone does it to some extent. Trump, who notably toned it down in his New York victory speech Tuesday night, is just an exaggerated example.
In using this type of speech, he has mastered the art of the insult.