English to Kannada Dictionary colloquialism

colloquialism

ಬಳಕೆಯ ಮಾತು
definition
noun
The natural evolution of language has integrated colloquialisms , or slang words, into everyday speech, but it has also magnified complexities associated with English grammar.
a word or phrase that is not formal or literary, typically one used in ordinary or familiar conversation.
example
Charles Martin has conveyed something of Ovid's famous wit by giving free rein to his own, especially by translating wherever possible into contemporary 'colloquialism' and slang.
There were pertinent summaries of Kiwi poetry's nationalism and 'colloquialism' .
But having said all of that, I would like to speak at least a few words in defense of 'colloquialism' .
Orhan Veli's 'colloquialism' is radical and transcends the middle class from which he came.
With much success he walks a fine line between scholarly jargon and patronizing 'colloquialism' .
He challenged contemporary taste by his use of 'colloquialism' and free verse, and became the principal among the authors writing in Chicago during and after the First World War.
Lemoine's stylized language dances all around Biblical convention, but throws in contemporary 'colloquialism' wherever humour and rhythm demand.
They use prose, rhyme, slang, metaphor, 'colloquialism' and patois.
Horseplay boasts a dense script, Morreison's 'colloquialism' and Baxter's poetic but brash speech captured brilliantly, winding up in two pages of straight poetry to end the play.
Whilst I had CHECKED my act for cultural references that wouldn't work, I had assumed wrongly that the crowd would be fluent English speakers and made no concessions for slang or 'colloquialism' .
It is time that divine help stepped in and coached Hollywood on the follies of shoddy impersonation, and even worse, blatant 'colloquialism' of all verbal history.
Her voice is a curious union of American pacing and British 'colloquialism' , with just enough of an accent to not seem forced, and her grammar is unexpectedly superb.
The academic protocols are observed, but her instincts are folksier, so her writing has a breathless, often brainless 'colloquialism' .
speech allows for 'colloquialism' and slang
The original Pamela turns readily to 'colloquialism' : she has experienced God's graciousness ‘at a Pinch’; she does not want to be ‘a Clog upon my dear Parents’.
The natural evolution of language has integrated 'colloquialisms' , or slang words, into everyday speech, but it has also magnified complexities associated with English grammar.
And so too many of our current irritating 'colloquialisms' , sloppy pronunciations, errors of grammar, newfangled meanings, slangy expressions-these can end up being part of the repertoire of Standard English in the future.
For the most part though, with its easy writing style and distinctly Kiwi 'colloquialisms' , it's an enjoyably readable book.
Both works also display Jones's preoccupation with the manifold dimensions of language through their deliberate echoes of African American dialects and 'colloquialisms' .
She and other employees go through extensive training that drills them in English phonetics, American 'colloquialisms' , and such pop culture topics as movies and sports.
Although they have studied English for four years, one of the biggest problems they face when they come here is just getting used to our accents and our 'colloquialisms' .
She has continued to work at her English finding now that idioms and 'colloquialisms' are the main problem.
The illustrations were augmented, and the entry and definition coverage expanded to include Americanisms, slang, and 'colloquialisms' .
Like all Indian dialects, my mother-tongue Konkani - an amalgam of coastal languages and regional 'colloquialisms' - has its share of adages.
He was a quiet boy with an active imagination and he became captivated by the 'colloquialisms' of the ordinary people around in Duagh.
Thus, she rather enjoyed smattering her generally formal English with a pot-pourri of 'colloquialisms' and jokes - her energy made her teaching a lot of fun.
He peppers the storytelling with African-American 'colloquialisms' and excursions into patois that echo his native Trinidad, the South, the street, the church and the bush.
The interviews were taped, and the many brief quotations, with all the 'colloquialisms' and speech oddities left in, are one of the most entertaining aspects of the book.
Six years across the Atlantic in America haven't altered an accent that is still more Milton Keynes than mid-west, but his vocabulary is peppered with 'colloquialisms' .
It's an insult - the day parliamentary security staff were banned from using the term ‘mate’ and similar 'colloquialisms' in public.
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