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jargon |
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jargonLanguage that is complex and hard to understand, usually because it is highly technical or occupational, used in the wrong contexts, or designed to impress or confuse (‘technical jargon’; ‘writing in pseudoscientific jargon’; ‘using a meaningless jargon’). Jargon can be subcategorized as, for example, bureaucratese or officialese (the usage of bureaucrats and officials), journalese (the language of newspapers), and medicalese (the usage of doctors), and so on. In writing, jargon may be highly formal, whereas in speech it often contains slang expressions.
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While Representing Black Men is an important contribution to critical theory, its accessibility is often limited by the book's abstruseness: its tendency toward jargonistic theory couched in a sesquipedalian vocabulary. The words are unsystematized, jargonistic, and perhaps ephemeral, but they express the work in a way that standardized vocabulary would obscure. Books by academics, usually written in defense of the multicultural project, have tended to be jargonistic and persuasive only to the already convinced. |
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