Sentences with phrase «in everyday parlance»

Sub Nom is Latin for «under the name of» or in everyday parlance, «also known as».
In everyday parlance, «on Cloud 9» means feeling elated, on top of the world, but for surfers it's more than this.
Though I find many creationists think the word «theory» when used in the realm of science means «guess», confusing the meaning of «scientific theory» with a meaning they may encounter in everyday parlance.

Not exact matches

If one omits the happy ending of Stage 7 (which Joan Jackson could include because her study was done in an AA wife's group), and translates the language of the social scientist into the parlance of everyday living, one has a picture of the starkest interpersonal tragedy.
GOES - West, which in satellite parlance sits in a geostationary orbit above the 135 ° W meridian, snaps a full Earth picture at local midnight everyday.
The notion of vernacular — a form of everyday parlance specific to a social group or region — manifests in his work through a graphic and discursive style developed in the context of globalized art production.
In denying the plaintiff's request for a new trial, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that instructions incorporating a legal analysis on the shifting burdens of proof in employment discriminbation cases established by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973 is appropriate when a trial court judge «translate [s] it into everyday parlance and fit [s] it to the facts and circumstancews of a particular case.&raquIn denying the plaintiff's request for a new trial, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that instructions incorporating a legal analysis on the shifting burdens of proof in employment discriminbation cases established by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973 is appropriate when a trial court judge «translate [s] it into everyday parlance and fit [s] it to the facts and circumstancews of a particular case.&raquin employment discriminbation cases established by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1973 is appropriate when a trial court judge «translate [s] it into everyday parlance and fit [s] it to the facts and circumstancews of a particular case.&raquin 1973 is appropriate when a trial court judge «translate [s] it into everyday parlance and fit [s] it to the facts and circumstancews of a particular case.»
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