Skip to main content

jargon

/jahr-guhn, -gon/US // ˈdʒɑr gən, -gɒn //UK // (ˈdʒɑːɡən) //

行话,术语,行语,专业术语

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the language, especially the vocabulary, peculiar to a particular trade, profession, or group: medical jargon.
    • : unintelligible or meaningless talk or writing; gibberish.
    • : any talk or writing that one does not understand.
    • : pidgin.
    • : language that is characterized by uncommon or pretentious vocabulary and convoluted syntax and is often vague in meaning.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to speak in or write jargon; jargonize.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nounspecialized language; dialect
Synonyms
argot语汇,语录,词条,术语idiom习惯用语,习语,熟语,习惯性用语lingo行语,行话parlance口语,俗语,口头禅,口头语patois土语,土话,行语,行话slang俚语,俗语,俚俗语,俗话vernacular白话,白话文,白话语,土话vocabulary词汇表,词汇量,词汇,词汇学abracadabra罡风,胡言乱语,罡气,胡言乱语的人balderdash胡说八道,狗屁不通,胡扯,废话连篇banality平庸,平庸之道,平庸之风bombast高谈阔论,高调,高调行事bunk铺位,下铺,卧铺,铺盖buzzwords流行语,热门词汇,热门词,流行词cant坎特,罐头,罐子colloquialism俗语,俗话说的好,俗话说,口语doublespeak双关语,双重语,双重性语言,双语drivel胡说八道,胡言乱语,胡说,胡扯fustian锈迹斑斑,锈蚀,锈色,锈迹斑斑的gibberish胡说八道,胡言乱语,胡扯八道insipidity淡化,淡薄,淡化现象,淡泊lexicon词典,词库,辞典,词汇表neologism新词,新名词,新词解释,新名词解释newspeak新闻讲话,新闻语言,新闻语汇,新闻术语nonsense无稽之谈,胡说八道,胡扯palaver游手好闲,游说,闲杂人等,游说者patter淅淅沥沥,模式,啪啪啪,啪嗒啪嗒rigmarole僵局,繁琐的手续,繁琐的工作,僵化slanguage俚语,语言,语文,语词speech讲话,发言,言语,演讲tongue舌头,舌苔,舌尖,语言twaddle胡说八道,胡言乱语,胡扯,废话连篇usage使用方法,使用情况,用法,用途clichécommonplace term俗语,俗称,俗话说的好,俗话说hackneyed term俗称,老生常谈,俗语mumbo jumbo胡说八道,胡言乱语,糊涂虫,莫须有的罪名overused term过度使用的术语,过度使用的词汇,过度使用的词语,滥竽充数shoptalk讲座,讲座内容stale language陈词滥调,陈旧的语言,陈腐的语言,过时的语言street talk街谈巷议,街头谈话,街头巷议,街谈巷语trite language陈词滥调,老套的语言,老生常谈的语言,俗语

Examples

  • Google’s goal is to help searchers understand jargon or technical terms they might not fully understand, by giving them this additional context without having to leave the page.

  • There is complex or technical jargon not everyone understands.

  • The “Seventh Sanctum,” some kind of other god that’s part woman, part machine, talks about how you need to “upgrade your gear,” and doesn’t even bother with the pleasantries of high fantasy jargon.

  • Climbing is a complicated sport, full of nuances and its own jargon.

  • People also do this in an effort to portray their highly esteemed intellect—this is when heavy jargon and polysyllabic alternatives to concise declarative expressions appear.

  • This is known as close air support, or CAS, in military jargon.

  • As fluent in drug trade jargon as Martian, Future peppers his lyrics with interstellar imagery befitting of his far out vocals.

  • Baffled by the jargon-heavy consumer information manual, I chatted with Cheryl Luptowski from the NSF consumer affairs office.

  • Above all, she felt, there was a more pressing need for it than ever before, with jargon steadily taking over the world.

  • As his highly technical and jargon-laden presentation rambled on, Obama was beginning to lose patience.

  • We owe it neither to the Syriac tongue nor to the Hebrew, a jargon of the Syriac, in which adultery is called niuph.

  • I'm quite out of the hunt here, however, for I can't pretend to understand the jargon of the thing.

  • Madame Probasco immediately transferred the glove to her forehead, and the jargon increased in rapidity.

  • Why introduce an unintelligible jargon, when we may be understood by pronouncing a simple name?

  • They are a people within a people, differing in dress as well as in language, which is a jargon of German-Hebrew.