英:[ˈdʒɑːɡən]
美:[ˈdʒɑːrɡən]
英:[ˈdʒɑːɡən]
美:[ˈdʒɑːrɡən]
第三人称单数:jargons
现在分词:jargoning
过去式:jargoned
过去分词:jargoned
noun
the technical terminology or characteristic idiom of a special activity or group
sports jargon
obscure and often pretentious language marked by circumlocutions and long words
an academic essay filled with jargon
confused unintelligible language
a strange, outlandish, or barbarous language or dialect
a hybrid language or dialect simplified in vocabulary and grammar and used for communication between peoples of different speech
verb
intransitive verb
jargonize
twitter, warble
14世纪中期,“难以理解的话,胡言乱语; 喋喋不休,叽叽喳喳”,源自古法语 jargon “鸟的叽叽喳喳”,也指“语言,言语”,尤其是“闲聊; 盗贼拉丁语”(12世纪)。最终源于拟声词(类似于拉丁语 garrire “喋喋不休”)。
从1640年代开始用作“混合语言,鸽语”; 1650年代开始用作“某个教派或职业特有的措辞”,因此“充满陌生术语的说话方式”。中古英语也将其作为动词 jargounen “喋喋不休”(14世纪晚期),源自法语。
行话,术语:用于某一专业或其他活动领域的技术性或专用语言
言语错乱,乱杂语
Noun and Verb Middle English, from Anglo-French jargun, gargon
The first known use of jargon was in the 14th century
jaundicedadjective
affected with or as if with jaundice
showing or influenced by envy, dislike, or hostility
a jaundiced eye
jaundicenoun
yellowish discoloring of the skin, tissues, and body fluids caused by the presence of coloring matter from the bilealso: a disease or abnormal condition marked by jaundice
a state or attitude marked by envy, dislike, or hostility
jaspernoun
an opaque mineral that occurs in several colors and is used for making ornamental objects (as vases)especially: green chalcedony
jasminenoun
any of numerous often climbing shrubs that are related to the olive and have extremely fragrant flowersalso: any of various plants noted for sweet-scented flowers
jargonnoun
the special language of a particular activity or group
legal jargon
language that is not clear and is full of long important-sounding words
a mixed language used for communication between peoples whose native languages are different
jargonnoun
the technical terminology or characteristic idiom of a special activity, group, profession, or field of study
medical jargon
unintelligible, meaningless, or incoherent speech (as that associated with Wernicke's aphasia or some forms of schizophrenia)
1 medical jargon that the layman cannot understand
2 Thousands of labels in its 60,000-piece collection were rewritten for a nonexpert audience and limited to 150 words, eliminating jargon.
3 The minute you start trying to capture some sort of jargon or whatever is hip now, you're already outdated, by the time it hits the screen.
4 He’s also smart not to give the audience time to be dizzied by all the financial jargon whizzing by.
5 Like many medical stories, it isn’t an easy one to tell, thanks to an unlimited supply of jargon and scientific terms that can cause a migraine in the average reader.
6 Journalists for the most part, not being scientists and on tight deadlines, read only the summary, which may have less scientific jargon and be more readily digestible than the rest of the paper.
7 In medical jargon it's called the Sympathetic Response.
8 Macmillan’s play features plenty of the jargon familiar to those in treatment, including a scene in which Emma, the actress careering through a breakdown — losing the plot while performing “The Seagull” — before seeking help.
9 There’s an effort to ground the hoopla in facts: The opening is a 2003 clip of President George W. Bush pitching the dream of homeownership, and the deal-making scenes are peppered with plausible jargon.
10 “As they say in Hollywood jargon, ‘She rates tall in my book,’ ” Andrews adds.
11 He mocked the confusing jargon and circumlocution of physicians and he pressed for the re-examination by the London School of Economics of untrustworthy medical statistics.
12 "It's mainly because too many of the descriptions of it are filled with jargon."
13 It is bogged down with much psychotherapeutic jargon — “Filmmaking was revealing itself to be a permission structure for me to recreate places and moments from my life,” for example — but raised up by Mx.
14 The manual is full of the jargon and slang of self-improvement courses.
手册里满是有关自修课程的行话术语。
15 Or will it have been a plague of historians who try to dress up their lectures by sprinkling them with Internet age jargon?
16 So keen in fact that, as the Mail on Sunday reported, he has emailed civil servants in his department urging them to drop the jargon and clean up their language.
17 “Are you trying,” Mum said with a half laugh, “to dazzle me with jargon?”
18 As discussed last week, sprinkle keywords throughout — but go easy on the jargon, especially if you’re transitioning from a field with its own highly specialized language, such as the military, Funk says.
19 But “Silicon Valley” is as much a wry study of modern entrepreneurialism — or, in jargon, “start-up culture” — as it is a comedy about work.
20 We should stay away from jargon, as our menu's users won't yet be acquainted with it.
因为菜单的用户还不熟悉功能,应该尽量避免行话.
1 行话
language lingo cant argot gobbledegook -speak vernacular babble patter patois Shelta speak idiom shop slang shoptalk talk locution abracadabra dialect argotic dialectal dial. d. buzzword
2 莫名其妙的话
3 喋喋不休
long-winded babbling loquacious garrulous big-mouthed yakky rattle gossip chatter jangle yammer loquacity garrulity jaw-jaw yatter clack blabber jaw chelp potsky chipper twiddle chaw talk away beat chops flip lip talk head
4 混杂语
6 术语
terminological technology term language terminology nomenclature lingo phraseology cant technicality parlance -speak dialect slang buzz word vernacular vocabulary
7 土话
9 黄锆石
11 暗语