Aún no tenemos significados para "popular parlance".
1Naturally, she'd heard that Grandpa was called 'the Preacher' in popular parlance.
2It's also endlessly quotable, with characters dispensing terminology that's since passed into popular parlance.
3In popular parlance, Jenkin was a dab at everything.
4This operation, in popular parlance, is termed porging.
5In popular parlance, these localities are said to contain "people who play pranks" (narod shalit).
6Many of the things he was writing about were so new that they hadn't entered popular parlance.
7One has already fallen into popular parlance.
8Florine knew Raoul's "uncle." The word meant usury, as in popular parlance "aunt" means pawn.
9He also loved the fact that in popular parlance he had been given the nickname of The Preacher.
10Thus is summed up, in popular parlance, the policy of the Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service.
11The "butterfly effect" stuck in popular parlance.
12But, as stated above, Madam Winthrop was rather capricious and, in popular parlance, she "kept him guessing."
13The Friponne, as it was styled in popular parlance, was the immense magazine established by the Grand Company of Traders in New France.
14The word 'myth', for example, is often used as a synonym for a lie: in popular parlance, a myth is something that is not true.
15In fact, just as strong desire goes by the name of passion in popular parlance, so mental obliquity on a grand scale is entitled madness.
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Popular parlance a través del tiempo