➠ SLANG - 5 Letters : Crossword Clue

We have 1 Solutions

  • - Jargon describing new scum in coal mining work outside
  • - Coarse jargon used in various languages
  • - Refuse to accept name in speech that's frowned on
  • - Target of some cultural appropriation
  • - Sort of language generally found in Urban Dictionary
  • - Snag possibly involving student in loose language
  • - "Getting pitted" or "in the slot," for surfers
  • - Ade's "Fables in ......"
  • - "Fables in ......"
  • - Vocabulary not often found in formal writing
  • - Some rap lingo
  • - Some neologisms
  • - Kind of vocabulary often found in Urban Dictionary
  • - George Ade's "Fables in ......"
  • - Linguistics topic
  • - Ohio sacked by hooligans, in a manner of speaking
  • - Some new dictionary additions
  • - Topic in some cultural appropriation discourse
  • - What Anthony Burgess called "the home-made language of the ruled, not the rulers […] demotic poetry emerging in flashes of ironic insight"
  • - Words not yet in the dictionary
  • - Tricky snag involving student in loose language
  • - Bad language perhaps, in a manner of speaking
  • - Informal speech in Totnes, languid
  • - Some talk on the street
  • - Some dictionary additions
  • - Subject of some dictionaries
  • - It might not appear in the dictionary
  • - Some teen talk
  • - What moolah is
  • - Word on the street is "Inclined to give away money"
  • - Informal, non-standard language
  • - Informal modern lingo such as it's lit and you do you
  • - hog, for a harley, e.g.
  • - What lit is for extremely fun
  • - Very informal colloquial words
  • - An essential part of thieves' language
  • - a bit of unceremonious language?
  • - Dross incorporating new means of expression
  • - A-game or b-ball, e.g.
  • - Teen talk, perhaps
  • - Young ladies returning, having adopted Northern jargon
  • - Drunks' language is filled with vernacular
  • - this clue is not good english
  • - Colloquial speech
  • - Improper English
  • - coarse speech succeeded with metropolis director
  • - informed about liberal jargon
  • - "Noodle" or "noggin," for head
  • - It's quite informal so to speak
  • - Idiomatic speech
  • - made song about learner's jargon
  • - "Tea" for "gossip," e.g.
  • - made a song about liberal using jargon
  • - Casual language that often challenges new immigrants
  • - Girls from south adopting new jargon
  • - textspeak, e.g.
  • - Like "ain't" & "gonna"
  • - lit, for fun
  • - "new ......" (shins song)
  • - Challenge for a language learner
  • - Informed about opening of long, informal speech
  • - "Dough" or "cheddar," for "money"
  • - nonstandard language
  • - Sends information over -- is lacking jargon
  • - casual speech
  • - Informal vocab
  • - Teen language
  • - Totes adorbs and adorkable e.g.
  • - The word on the street?
  • - Street vernacular
  • - Informal vernacular
  • - Casual language
  • - Swell, e.g.
  • - Jive talk
  • - Colorful talk
  • - Breezy idiom
  • - Ade medium
  • - "Dis" is it
  • - What all the kids are saying nowadays
  • - What "dis" is
  • - What "bread" is for "money"
  • - Vulgate
  • - Vulgar parlance
  • - Vocabulary of a sort
  • - Village idiom?
  • - Verbal novelties
  • - Urbandictionary.com specialty
  • - Threads, for clothing
  • - Terms like "show biz"
  • - Teen talk, often
  • - Style of George Ade's fables.
  • - Sicko or wacko, e.g.
  • - Sandburg's "language that rolls up its sleeves"
  • - Phat or groovy
  • - Not the king's English
  • - Modern additions to the Oxford English Dictionary, often
  • - Medium for George Ade
  • - Medium for Ade's fables
  • - Medium for Ade
  • - Looie or hooey, e.g.
  • - Like much hip-hop lingo
  • - Like gnarly
  • - Like "hot-diggity"
  • - Latest lingo
  • - Knuckle sandwich and piece of cake, e.g.
  • - Jive talkin'
  • - It's not formal
  • - It usually comes from the hip?
  • - Informal words
  • - Highly informal language
  • - Goofball or goof-off
  • - George Ade's fable style
  • - Gang's language
  • - Dis, dawg or dude
  • - Dis or moola, e.g.
  • - Colorful language, sometimes
  • - Cockney rhyming material
  • - Challenge for new immigrants
  • - Bread or moola, e.g.
  • - Blotto or stinko, e.g.
  • - Big gun or big cheese, e.g.
  • - Big cheese or long green
  • - Bananas, crackers and nuts, e.g.
  • - "Snafu," for instance.
  • - "Language that rolls up its sleeves, spits on its hands and goes to work," per Carl Sandburg
  • - "Kiddo," e.g.
  • - "It's lit," "Keep it 100," etc.
  • - "Fall guy" or "gent," e.g.
  • - "Crib" for "home," e.g.
  • - "Beak" for "nose," e.g.
  • - Common (language)
  • - Breezy talk
  • - Lexicographer's label
  • - Troublesome snag about student lingo
  • - Street jargon
  • - Dross incorporating new vernacular
  • - Informal vocabulary
  • - Translating challenge
  • - Teenspeak, for example
  • - Spoken lingo avoiding normal glossary first of all
  • - Urban Dictionary focus
  • - Informal language
  • - Interpreter's challenge
  • - 'Hammered' for 'drunk,' e.g
  • - Jargon
  • - Lexicographer's study
  • - Woke or turnt, e.g
  • - Translator's challenge
  • - Street talk
  • - Urban Dictionary fodder
  • - Urban Dictionary content
  • - Informal talk
  • - Lexicography label
  • - Informal speech
  • - 'Cray' and 'totes adorbs,' e.g
  • - Urban Dictionary entries
  • - Colloquial language
  • - Language student's challenge
  • - Informal speaking
  • - Vernacular; originally jargon of disreputable people
  • - Much teen talk
  • - Grammarian's no-no
  • - Type of dictionary
  • - Loose talk
  • - Like 'Chill out!' and 'Cool it!'
  • - Challenge for a translator
  • - Words on the street?
  • - Much street talk
  • - Street lingo
  • - Informal lingo
  • - Tense talk, often
  • - Challenge for translators
  • - It comes from the hip
  • - Misses upset surrounding new jargon
  • - Are patois and argot among 'les langues de France'?
  • - It may be thrown around at a party
  • - It's the word on the street
  • - Like "dis"
  • - Shins "New ......"
  • - Framily, for example
  • - Jargon, e.g.
  • - Dictionary label
  • - "Pasted" or "wasted," for "drunk"
  • - "Hit the road" or "hit the books"
  • - Hair of the dog or the cat's pajamas
  • - Faddish language
  • - Bad, for good
  • - Idiomatic talk
  • - Word on the street, maybe
  • - Loose language
  • - Informal verbiage
  • - Loose usage
  • - Controversial dictionary entry, perhaps
  • - It's spoken from the hip?
  • - "Bad" for "good," e.g.
  • - "The cat's meow" or "a dog's life"
  • - Talk on the street?
  • - Casual talk
  • - Teen talk
  • - Street language, often
Crossword Clues by Letters: