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List of synonyms from "verity" to synonyms from "verve"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms vermicelli, vernacular, vernal, versant, vert, vertigo and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « vernacular »
- adj native, colloquial
- noun native language
- "'It is not the custom,'" wearily quoted Kingozi in the vernacular.
- Extract from : « The Leopard Woman » by Stewart Edward White
- The jokes are in the vernacular, but in a vernacular as spoken in a certain social medium.
- Extract from : « The American Mind » by Bliss Perry
- He was, if you will pardon the vernacular, on the outside, looking in.
- Extract from : « The Crevice » by William John Burns and Isabel Ostrander
- This court is overrun with Jesuits, and we must needs adopt their vernacular.
- Extract from : « Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess » by Henry W. Fischer
- She said this in the tone of one consciously assuming the vernacular.
- Extract from : « They of the High Trails » by Hamlin Garland
- He told his story in a vernacular racier than I dare to copy; but it came to this.
- Extract from : « The Making Of A Novelist » by David Christie Murray
- These were what were known in the vernacular as "on-marchantable shingle-bolts."
- Extract from : « Home Life in Colonial Days » by Alice Morse Earle
- He used no slang, and retained scarcely a word of his boyhood's vernacular.
- Extract from : « A Daughter of the Middle Border » by Hamlin Garland
- Vernacular (from verna, a slave born in his master's house).
- Extract from : « The Uncollected Writings of Thomas de Quincey, Vol. 2 » by Thomas de Quincey
- Stannard would use the vernacular of the frontier when at all excited.
- Extract from : « Marion's Faith. » by Charles King