Synonym: argot, cant, jargoon, lingo, patois, slang, vernacular. Similar words: cargo, undergone, ergonomics, embargo, gargoyle, jar, forgot, ergo. Meaning: ['dʒɑrgən /'dʒɑː-] n. 1. a characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves) 2. a colorless (or pale yellow or smoky) variety of zircon 3. specialized technical terminology characteristic of a particular subject.
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121. She skipped the jargon when she read the popular science magazine.
122. In his hands, comic jargon and dialect became a finished literary weapon, unemphatic, visual.
123. Firms are finding that they cannot replace expensive expatriate staff with cheaper local hires ("localise" in the jargon) as quickly as they hoped.
124. The litany of names, numbers and financial jargon is at times exhausting, even with the help of an eight-page cast of characters and two-page glossary of acronyms.
125. It looks soft and full of feeling, It'smiles at my - jargon, it is susceptible.
126. In American English, Slang mingled with jargon and Colloquialism, but they are different from each other.
127. Scientific instruments are necessary to make quantum phenomena intuitive, and the probability amplitude as a scientific jargon is indispensable for describing electron itself.
128. Above an HDI of 0.9 or so, it turned up, producing what is known in the jargon as a "J-shaped" curve (even though it is the mirror image of a letter J).
129. Clearness and conciseness often go hand-in-hand and the elimination of wordy business jargon can help to make a letter clearer and at the same time more concise.
130. The best accountants do not hide behind jargon or technical mumbo-jumbo.
131. All the critical twiddle - twaddle about style and form is mere impertinence and mostly dull jargon.
132. In video jargon, the brightness is called the luminance signal (sentencedict.com), while the color is the chrominance signal .
133. Remember, too, that the outcomes of international summits are, in the jargon, "precooked."
134. In Oxfam jargon, this can be called sustainable self-driven development. In their minds, it probably means a better life, for themselves, their families and their communities.
135. We should stay away from jargon, as our menu's users won't yet be acquainted with it.
136. It is important not to be overawed by the mathematical jargon.
137. Because humanists are put off by the jargon used in computer manuals and by computer professionals, it is important to stay away from unnecessary technical terminology.
138. The terms adaptation, speciation, mutation are all the jargon of transformation -- of differences over time.
139. Scientists use off-putting jargon.
140. In his hands,[http://sentencedict.com/jargon.html] comic jargon and dialect became a finished literary weapon.
141. We are unversed in the jargon of the social scientist.
142. In aeronautic jargon, he's talking about developing More Electric Architecture ( MEA ).
143. Just as business and science reporters avoid economic and business jargon, sportswriters should avoid terms that only the most ardent fan or coach would know.
144. In the jargon, they are all embraced by the term " ground roll ".
145. He spoke such a jargon I couldn't make head or tail of what he said.
146. With or without campus jargon, the annoyingly unfair fact is that marriageable men tend to like women who are young, fertile and intellectually unthreatening.
147. Although specialized terms can be used, pretentious jargon should be avoided.
148. In the book Garner on Language and Writing, Former U.S. Solicitor GeneralTheodore Olsen wrote, "Legalese is jargon. All professions have it.
149. Chinook Jargon:a pidgin language combining words from Nootka, Chinook, Salishan languages, French, and English, formerly used as a lingua franca in the Pacific Northwest.
150. Here's the key:The values you use must be defined so that they are relatable to agile, easily understandable (not full of abstract notions or business jargon), and resonant.