He had personal reasons to know the fundamental accuracy of the colloquialism.
2
There, Mr. Editor, you have a pleasing comminglement of romance and colloquialism.
3
But in everyday speech a certain amount of colloquialism is inevitable.
4
The richness of colloquialism moved the vicar of Mount Dunstan to deep enjoyment.
5
The colloquialism escaped Homosoto, but he got the gist of it.
1
An abbreviation of Betwixt, used in poetry, or in colloquiallanguage.
2
That was the original language of the Bible, a colloquiallanguage.
3
Its satirical tone, contemporary colloquiallanguage and run-on style are both amusing and annoying.
4
It is not just a colloquiallanguage, Buthelezi said.
5
Or, as she also puts it using more colloquiallanguage, "the whole caboodle comes back".
1
What would be a casualspeech on the tongue of another becomes significant, when he has given one of his original twists to it.
2
Like other self-made men who had come to New York-like Selma herself-hehad shrunk from and deplored at first the lighter tone of casualspeech.
1
Bunyan originated this colloquialstyle, and Defoe and Richardson were his imitators.
2
Mr. Sprudell had a jaunty, colloquialstyle when he stooped to prose.
3
Perrin was nettled, for he prided himself on his colloquialstyle.
4
All other translations follow colloquialstyle for quick comprehension.
5
Alan laughed at the man's inflated English, and answered in a more nervous and colloquialstyle:
1
I shuddered as the man grew colloquial-andwith familiarspeech of another day.
2
Very careful, prudent, precise persons are seldom entertaining in familiarspeech.
3
Everything has its due season, familiarspeech and formal speech.
4
Mr. Calton, construing her silence and averted head into some resentment of his familiarspeech, continued hurriedly:-
5
Peyton ignored the now familiarspeech.
1
I couldn't help myself and I kept my voice to a lowregister because Hayden was in the vicinity.
2
He seeks the fundamental tones of the Maket pipes in the first or lowregister, an octave below the normal pitch.
3
His face always grave, yet strong and comforting, his voice unwavering, yet muted to a lowregister, he commanded the mourning ritual.
4
Her range is good, with a lovely full lowregister, 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 lowregister.
1
They cross the line going from informallanguage to a physics lesson.
2
She loved being their informallanguage teacher.
3
People write back in the first person, using the informallanguage of the web, and Trump retweets messages from his followers.
4
Of course, with short e-mail messages that use informallanguage, as opposed to long documents, the need for editing or correction is minimal.
5
Since that December, the informallanguage of the SMS and other digital platforms has become a social concern, especially for its effect on kids.
1
The doctor had been "at him," so to speak, searching the depths of him with a probing acuteness the casuallanguage had disguised.
Ús de colloquial speech en anglès
1
His colloquialspeech accorded badly with his formal tone.
2
But the Colonel's colloquialspeech was apt to be fragmentary incoherencies of his larger oratorical utterances.
3
The phraseology is less literary, and more taken from the colloquialspeech and the usage of everyday life.
4
He did not use them to show off, but because they seemed to him more adequate than colloquialspeech.
5
The wheel which he had jogged so agreeably had come full round, and, in colloquialspeech, had biffed him in the eye.
6
Mr. Howells, a master of English, may be taken as a faithful reporter of the colloquialspeech of Boston and New York.
7
Whatever may be said against employing contractions in dignified discourse, their use in colloquialspeech is too firmly established to justify our censure.
8
Do you notice elements that give the text a flavor of oral storytelling, such as colloquialspeech or occasional use of second person or questions?