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slang |
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slangVery informal language usage that often serves to promote a feeling of group membership. It is not usually acceptable in formal speech or writing and includes expressions that may be impolite or taboo in conventional communication. Forms of slang develop among particular groups (for example soldiers, teenagers, and criminals), and are often extended into more general use because social conditions make them fashionable or people have grown accustomed to using them. Some types of slang are highly transient; others may last across generations and gain currency in the standard language. Slang is pervasive in its influence, and is passed on through popular culture via newspapers, magazines, pop music, television, the Internet, and other media. Slang usage can range from the alteration of a conventional word (for example, answering a question with ‘yeah’ instead of ‘yes’) to the formation of a new expression (for example, ‘Whassup?’ for ‘What are you doing?’). However, because slang is often vivid and suggestive, and associated with contentious attitudes and topics, many people find it disturbing or offensive. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Through the introduction of indecipherable graffiti tags--enlarged and repeated to create flashy rhythmic patterns--as well as scribbled words of English slang, fragments of Islamic script, and other ad hoc means of communication imported from the street, politics is brought vigorously into play. Research would be needed to ascertain whether such themes are consistently present the way they appear to be in English slang. Before that the word was recorded in Tsotsitaal (an argot with an Afrikaans structural base and lexical items from a variety of sources, especially the African languages of the country) and in Indian English slang with the predominant meaning 'white man, overseer, boss, rich man'. |
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