Jargon words are words specific to a certain field and dialect is how a language is spoken in a certain area, For instance, computer Jargon may include words such as 'keyboard' or 'mouse'. A dialect would be like comparing two areas that speak the same language very differently such as Australia and Canada.
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Jargon is a specialized language or terminology used within a particular field or community. It is not a dialect, which refers to a specific variety of a language spoken by a particular group of people based on factors like region, social class, or ethnicity. Jargon is more about technical or specialized vocabulary within a specific domain.
vocabulary, tongue, idiom, language, accent, cant, jargon, pronunciation, terminology, slang, lingo, vernacular
Vernacular, jargon, localism, regionalism, pronunciation, lingo,
jargon is the lingo or words used by a line of work or profession ex. oftentimes webpage makers will use jargon as a way to express complex functions also lawyers and paralegals often use dialect that is known as law jargon
"Clirror" does not have a standard meaning in the English language. It may be a made-up or misspelled word, or it could belong to a specific dialect or jargon not widely recognized.
Vernacular, dialect or local jargon.
Jargon is a specialized language or terminology used within a particular field or community. It is not a dialect, which refers to a specific variety of a language spoken by a particular group of people based on factors like region, social class, or ethnicity. Jargon is more about technical or specialized vocabulary within a specific domain.
vocabulary, tongue, idiom, language, accent, cant, jargon, pronunciation, terminology, slang, lingo, vernacular
Vernacular, jargon, localism, regionalism, pronunciation, lingo,
fuccc u :)
jargon is the lingo or words used by a line of work or profession ex. oftentimes webpage makers will use jargon as a way to express complex functions also lawyers and paralegals often use dialect that is known as law jargon
Jargon, patois, or dialect. Also this does not belong in the business and economics section.
Cant. Cant is the jargon of theives. It is not the same word as can't.
"You catched a fish" is poor grammar -- it should be "you caught a fish."
When talking about 'shiner' in the context of a 'black eye', this is slang.Dialects tend to be patterns of speech used in only a specific area. Jargon is really 'technical slang', slang used by people in certain professions.
"Clirror" does not have a standard meaning in the English language. It may be a made-up or misspelled word, or it could belong to a specific dialect or jargon not widely recognized.
"Chewency" does not appear to be a recognized word in the English language. It may be a misspelling or a word from a specific dialect or jargon. Without more context, it is difficult to determine its meaning.