We have no meanings for "colloquial term" in our records yet.
1 They use a colloquial term for the syndrome -getting leaded.
2 Brilliant, but he was... what's the colloquial term for it?
3 Disco is a colloquial term .
4 Kiwis should not be outbid like this, said Ardern in an emailed statement, using the colloquial term for New Zealanders.
5 She was also criticized for not having a buiniga, the colloquial term for the naturally frizzy hair indigenous to Fiji.
6 The way he talks of it, the term might have been a colloquial term applied to a jayhawker or a patroller.
7 The message sounded odd -her mother used the official word for the national language, not the colloquial term they normally said.
8 Dagga might be a colloquial term in Southern Africa, but it has no duplicitous meaning or vernacular value in Canada, where Chromag is based.
9 So to put it in colloquial terms we would say the president blinked.
10 Salander is, to put it in colloquial terms , stark raving mad.
11 She sings about love in simple, colloquial terms , but the melodies are just the right mix of catchy and well-crafted.
12 (The word is a colloquial term for a tree with the roots still attached.)
13 Ger Carmody's title is Head of Operations at the IRFU, although the colloquial terms , pathfinder or facilitator, perhaps best encapsulates his role.
14 "I believe the colloquial term is 'racket,'" Goode said.
15 "True," she said, recognizing the colloquial term Six-Four -shorthandfor the Tiananmen incident, which had occurred on June fourth.
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