slang
英[slæŋ]
美[slæŋ]
- n. 俚语;行话
- adj. 俚语的
- vi. 用粗话骂
- vt. 用俚语说
助记提示
1、slovenly + language.中文词源
slang 俚语,行话,黑话,粗话俚语,词源不详,可能来自 sling,扔,投掷,引申比喻义脏话,粗俗话。
英文词源
- slang
- slang: [18] Slang is a mystery word. It first appeared in underworld argot of the mid-18th century. It had a range of meanings – ‘cant’, ‘nonsense’, ‘line of business’, and, as a verb, ‘defraud’. Most of these have died out, but ‘cant’ is the lineal ancestor of the word’s modern meaning. It is not clear where it came from, although the use of the verb slang for ‘abuse’, and the expression slanging match ‘abusive argument’, suggest some connection with Norwegian dialect sleng- ‘offensive language’ (found only in compounds).
- slang (n.)
- 1756, "special vocabulary of tramps or thieves," later "jargon of a particular profession" (1801), of uncertain origin, the usual guess being that it is from a Scandinavian source, such as Norwegian slengenamn "nickname," slengja kjeften "to abuse with words," literally "to sling the jaw," related to Old Norse slyngva "to sling." But OED, while admitting "some approximation in sense," discounts this connection based on "date and early associations." Liberman also denies it, as well as any connection with French langue (or language or lingo). Rather, he derives it elaborately from an old slang word meaning "narrow piece of land," itself of obscure origin. Century Dictionary says "there is no evidence to establish a Gipsy origin." Sense of "very informal language characterized by vividness and novelty" first recorded 1818.
[S]lang is a conscious offence against some conventional standard of propriety. A mere vulgarism is not slang, except when it is purposely adopted, and acquires an artificial currency, among some class of persons to whom it is not native. The other distinctive feature of slang is that it is neither part of the ordinary language, nor an attempt to supply its deficiencies. The slang word is a deliberate substitute for a word of the vernacular, just as the characters of a cipher are substitutes for the letters of the alphabet, or as a nickname is a substitute for a personal name. [Henry Bradley, from "Slang," in "Encyclopedia Britannica," 11th ed.]
A word that ought to have survived is slangwhanger (1807, American English) "noisy or abusive talker or writer."
双语例句
- 1. Archie liked to think he kept up with current slang.
- 阿奇喜欢那种紧跟潮流,讲满口时髦新词的感觉。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. We settled down to a quiet discussion of English slang.
- 我们安下心来讨论英语俚语的用法.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 3. The phrase is labelled as slang in the dictionary.
- 这个短语在这本字典里被注为俚语.
来自《简明英汉词典》
- 4. Slang often goes in and out of fashion quickly.
- 俚语往往很快风行起来又很快不再风行了.
来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
- 5. " Brass " is slang for " money ".
- “ brass ” 是 “ money ” 一词的俚语.
来自《现代汉英综合大词典》