Ainda não temos significados para "colloquial term".
1They use a colloquial term for the syndrome -getting leaded.
2Brilliant, but he was... what's the colloquial term for it?
3Disco is a colloquial term.
4Kiwis should not be outbid like this, said Ardern in an emailed statement, using the colloquial term for New Zealanders.
5She was also criticized for not having a buiniga, the colloquial term for the naturally frizzy hair indigenous to Fiji.
6The way he talks of it, the term might have been a colloquial term applied to a jayhawker or a patroller.
7The message sounded odd -her mother used the official word for the national language, not the colloquial term they normally said.
8Dagga might be a colloquial term in Southern Africa, but it has no duplicitous meaning or vernacular value in Canada, where Chromag is based.
9So to put it in colloquial terms we would say the president blinked.
10Salander is, to put it in colloquial terms, stark raving mad.
11She 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.)
13Ger 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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