Style of the language used for casual communication.
Sinònims
Examples for "colloquialism"
Examples for "colloquialism"
1He had personal reasons to know the fundamental accuracy of the colloquialism.
2There, Mr. Editor, you have a pleasing comminglement of romance and colloquialism.
3But in everyday speech a certain amount of colloquialism is inevitable.
4The richness of colloquialism moved the vicar of Mount Dunstan to deep enjoyment.
5The colloquialism escaped Homosoto, but he got the gist of it.
1What would be a casual speech on the tongue of another becomes significant, when he has given one of his original twists to it.
2Like other self-made men who had come to New York-like Selma herself-hehad shrunk from and deplored at first the lighter tone of casual speech.
1Bunyan originated this colloquial style, and Defoe and Richardson were his imitators.
2Mr. Sprudell had a jaunty, colloquial style when he stooped to prose.
3Perrin was nettled, for he prided himself on his colloquial style.
4All other translations follow colloquial style for quick comprehension.
5Alan laughed at the man's inflated English, and answered in a more nervous and colloquial style:
1His colloquial speech accorded badly with his formal tone.
2But the Colonel's colloquial speech was apt to be fragmentary incoherencies of his larger oratorical utterances.
3The phraseology is less literary, and more taken from the colloquial speech and the usage of everyday life.
4He did not use them to show off, but because they seemed to him more adequate than colloquial speech.
5The wheel which he had jogged so agreeably had come full round, and, in colloquial speech, had biffed him in the eye.
1I shuddered as the man grew colloquial-andwith familiar speech of another day.
2Very careful, prudent, precise persons are seldom entertaining in familiar speech.
3Everything has its due season, familiar speech and formal speech.
4Mr. Calton, construing her silence and averted head into some resentment of his familiar speech, continued hurriedly:-
5Peyton ignored the now familiar speech.
1I couldn't help myself and I kept my voice to a low register because Hayden was in the vicinity.
2He seeks the fundamental tones of the Maket pipes in the first or low register, an octave below the normal pitch.
3His face always grave, yet strong and comforting, his voice unwavering, yet muted to a low register, he commanded the mourning ritual.
4Her range is good, with a lovely full low register, a firm middle register and no appreciable trace of [strain in the top.
5"You mustn't go." Ominously, Ellen's voice dipped to the low register.
1They cross the line going from informal language to a physics lesson.
2She loved being their informal language teacher.
3People write back in the first person, using the informal language of the web, and Trump retweets messages from his followers.
4Of course, with short e-mail messages that use informal language, as opposed to long documents, the need for editing or correction is minimal.
5Since that December, the informal language of the SMS and other digital platforms has become a social concern, especially for its effect on kids.
1The doctor had been "at him," so to speak, searching the depths of him with a probing acuteness the casual language had disguised.
1An abbreviation of Betwixt, used in poetry, or in colloquial language.
2That was the original language of the Bible, a colloquial language.
3Its satirical tone, contemporary colloquial language and run-on style are both amusing and annoying.
4It is not just a colloquial language, Buthelezi said.
5Or, as she also puts it using more colloquial language, "the whole caboodle comes back".
6The project will ask volunteers to introduce refugees to social activities and help them practise colloquial language skills.
7Our colloquial language reflects these intuitions.
8N. B.-Incolloquial language and ordinary writing Thou, Thine and Thee are seldom used, except by the Society of Friends.
9It was a mimeographed notice urging "the boys" in condescendingly colloquial language to pay the dues of the American Legion.
10He had an immense amount of that sort of courage which, in the colloquial language of our times, would probably be described as bumptiousness.
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Translations for colloquial language