Thursday, 3 October 2013

Colloquial

 I have sometimes used the word colloquial to describe words on this blog. I should explain that colloquial does not mean slang.   
 
Slang is a kind of language occurring chiefly in casual and playful speech, made up typically of short-lived coinages and figures of speech that are deliberately used in place of standard terms for added raciness, humour, irreverence, or other effect; language peculiar to a group; argot or jargon.


Colloquial is often assumed to mean slang but it doesn't.  It simply means as used in a conversational sense; used in ordinary conversation; not formal or literary. Even a look at its synonyms yields ‘everyday’, ‘common’, and ‘idiomatic’ but not slang.  Colloquialisms are therefore perfectly acceptable in conversation whereas slang may or may not be.

4 comments:

  1. Another difference is probably that some slang terms may only be understood by the group familiar with that particular slang, while colloquial terms are generally understood by (almost) everyone.

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  2. To me, colloquial also always meant the everyday use particular to an area. As in, New Orleans has a colloquial term for the strip of grass that runs down the middle of a divided street or boulevard. There, it's called the "neutral ground," and dates back to the strip down the middle of a street in colonial days dividing the French side of the street from the Spanish side. The center was neutral.

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  3. hurray, I had at least a working knowledge of this word! I hope all is well for you and SWDT. (did I get that right?)

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  4. I think I probably knew but I might have made a mess of trying to explain... Thanks for clearing that up! ;)

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