argot


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  • noun

Synonyms for argot

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for argot

a variety of a language that differs from the standard form

specialized expressions indigenous to a particular field, subject, trade, or subculture

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Synonyms for argot

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Men's use of gay argot fostered their sense of collective identity.
Argot Partners will relocate from a 4,293 s/f on the 29th floor to the entire 34th floor of the building, increasing its footprint by more than 3,000 s/f.
Eyez presents, in the argot of hip-hop, why "Indian" mascots are most inappropriate.
NOTTINGHAM 6.00 Ferryview Place 6.30 Maiden Approach 7.00 Explosive Lady 7.30 Katie Gale 8.00 Tanqeya 8.30 Argot 9.00 Simply Shining.
NOTTINGHAM: 6.00 Ferryview Place, 6.30 Maiden Approach, 7.00 Explosive Lady, 7.30 Katie Gale, 8.00 Tanqeya, 8.30 Argot, 9.00 Simply Shining.
That said, the embrace of limited series (industry argot for the 13-episode arcs popularized by the cable networks) and an "always on" programming strategy has broadcasters prepared for the worst.
The first is written in a dense Marxist argot that focuses on the "real subsumption" of use-value into circuits of exchange.
Ahhh Runnymede and argot. Much has fortunately changed with the English language, forsooth, since that day in the paddock in 1647 and good golly gosh, how glad I am that the language has not stood still.
Por el contrario, en otros grupos de mamiferos la morfologia postcraneal esta ampliamente estudiada y ha sido utilizada intensamente con fines taxonomicos y morfofuncionales (Howell, 1926; Hatt, 1932; Robert, 1974; Taylor, 1974, 1976; Evans, 1993; Gebo y Sargis, 1994; Argot, 2001, 2002, 2003; Sargis, 2001, 2002a,b; Morgan y Verzi, 2006; Candela y Picasso, 2008; Flores y Diaz, 2009; Morgan, 2009; Abello y Candela, 2010; Morgan y Verzi, 2011; entre otros) y mas limitadamente en estudios filogeneticos (Horovitz y Sanchez-Villagra, 2003; Giannini y Simmons, 2005; Flores, 2009).
The grapes are used for Kruse's Argot Wines, which makes about 2,000 cases.
My friends were so impressed with the genuineness suggested in the well-presented storyboard depiction of Iran leading to the 1979 revolution that they entirely missed the visual-vocal cinematographic argot employed during the rest of the 2-hour movie past those first few minutes; or the accuracy in details, and the spark used to ignite the latent jingoism in an American audience by making a "mostly Canadian" event, one of glorification to America and the illusory exceptionalism of her people.