অপভাষা, অর্থহীন ভাষা, কিচ্মিচ্ শব্দ, অর্থহীন বাক্য
(1) A characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves),a colorless (or pale yellow or smoky) variety of zircon,specialized technical terminology characteristic of a particular subject,specialized language; dialect
(2) A characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves)
(3) A colorless (or pale yellow or smoky) variety of zircon
(4) Specialized technical terminology characteristic of a particular subject
(5) Specialized language; dialect
(1) Legal jargon
(2) Cold and clinical to the point of boredom, filled with emotionless commentary and business jargon , it was difficult to tell what effect this character was meant to have.
(3) Many hospitals, for instance, make a professional available to go over the records with the patient, who might not understand the medical jargon therein.
(4) But yesterday the Government's response was said to be so full of difficult wording and jargon that it was impossible to know what it said.
(5) Remember your international visitors by avoiding regional word usage or technical jargon that could alienate.
(6) In fact ask any management specialist, from any sector, to exclude every word of jargon from a conversation, and there is likely to be silence.
(7) The substitution of a clear word for euphemistic jargon is found in all forms of manufactured communication, but is perhaps most often used by the military.
(8) When investing long term, you need to steer clear of plans that are difficult to understand or packed with jargon , have high charges or are inflexible and lock you in with penalties.
(9) One major obstacle remains: trials are still conducted in technical jargon that juries find difficult to understand and which prosecutors find difficult to establish as an overwhelming case.
(10) The IT&T industry is rife with acronyms, catchphrases and jargon .
(11) Some visitors to your website may be from outside your industry and may not understand some of the jargon or acronyms.
(12) They have used words and jargon that ordinary people can't understand as a way of preserving and extending their power while excluding the vast majority of the population.
(13) Lord Woolf's challenge to the legal profession comes after he replaced the traditional trappings of Latin phrases and legal jargon as part of a review of civil courts.
(14) This is the essential function of a clichu00d4u00f6u00a3u252cu00ab, and of cant and jargon ; to neutralise expression and u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510vanish memoryu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb.
(15) There are three main reasons consumers do not compare financial products: misguided loyalty, inertia and an inability to understand financial jargon .
(16) I don't understand all the technical jargon , but do agree with the general gist of maintaining freedom of communication outside the oppression of big business monopolies.
(17) I also get the sense that some lawyers think baffling legal jargon and tortured syntax will impress their clients.
(18) Lay persons shouldn't be expected to understand medical jargon or complex terminology.
(19) His invitation to the applicant to put an application under section 38 of the Evidence Act is couched in legal jargon , not in plain words.
(20) Bunett's prose is often loaded with arty jargon and heavyweight expressions that are virtually incomprehensible.
specialized language
vernacular
jargoon
Standard