Sentences with phrase «vernacular terms»

In the field trial vernacular the terms «major stake» and «all age stakes» are used interchangeably to refer collectively to the Open and Amateur, championship, stakes.
(«Dalit» is the indigenous vernacular term for outcastes — otherwise called «harijans and girijans» or «scheduled castes and tribes.»
And its because of the improper tuning AFR (air to fuel ratio) of the carb, it causes a «missing» (a vernacular term we have in India) and eventually your scooter going of while its raining.
The vernacular term contraband got from making utilization of the shank of a boot for the reasons for booty is every now and again made utilization of to characterize unlawfully duplicated material.
The title, Sirens, is a triple - entendre, evoking the sounds emitted by cop cars, as well as the vernacular term for a sexually provocative actress and the deadly seductresses of Greek mythology.
It's gotten so «silly» that even someone who calls himself a legal writer doesn't know that the vernacular term «Lame Duck» has been in common parlance for years, with respect to presidents and others, long before Obama arrived.

Not exact matches

Start - up ecosystems — or «clusters,» a term Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter introduced into the vernacular in the early 1990s — don't tend to materialize spontaneously.
P.O.D. is able to speak to masculinity, religious warfare and spiritual aggression in secular terms that unravel the backgrounds of such biblically - charged ideas into West Coast street vernacular, disarming any perception of potential threat.
The scientific term «theory» is quite different from the vernacular usage that people have been throwing around in these comments.
This term «boundaries» has moved from counselor lingo to a part of our everyday vernacular.
One of their spokesmen2 declares: «The very vernacular use of the term religion is tending to hasten the identification of religion with the questing process.
Both the ads and the packaging are awash in teen vernacular; terms such as ripped, cut, mega, Xtreme and turbo are used repeatedly.
It's really fruitless to argue about physics terminology when the same terms are used in the vernacular: for example work and free energy.
«Ethnological data collection such as ours, including the collection of terms in the local vernacular, can open new avenues of research about variations in ecology, fauna and flora,» they conclude.
The term «nanotechnology» entered into the public vernacular quite suddenly around the turn of the century, right around the same time that, when announcing the US National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) in 2001 [2000; see the American Association for the Advancement of Science webpage on Historical Trends in Federal R&D, scroll down to the National Nanotechnology Initiative and click on the Jpg or Excel links], President Bill Clinton declared that it would one day build materials stronger than steel, detect cancer at its inception, and store the vast records of the Library of Congress in a device the size of a sugar cube.
Trademarking something like the term «Fire Cider» is the same as trademarking something like «Lemonade» just because it a relatively new vernacular (1970 / 80s) does not give them the right to trademark something owned by everyone.
Man Repeller clocks millions of pageviews a month and the concept of «man repelling» has entered the fashion vernacular, as has «arm party,» a term coined by Medine to describe her habit of stacking her forearms with numerous bracelets.
The term smartphone had barely entered our vernacular, and it'd be decades before dating apps would take over singles» lives.
In 2001, author Valerie Gibson played a big part in making the term a part of our vernacular, as well as giving it a push in a positive direction.
Next, it's reaching our vernacular with big sites like Match and eHarmony being tossed around like common terms everyone should know.
This way you have the opportunity to share your vernacular views, and ideas whether in terms of lifestyle or religion.
February 23, 2018 • Olympic sports have their own vernacularterms that make no sense to outsiders.
The basic idea in the grant proposal was that teachers had to overcome their squeamishness in talking about sex; indeed, they needed to learn how to stand in front of the classroom and describe intimate body parts using their students» vernacular, rather than the technical terms found in biology textbooks.
The term enters the social popular vernacular as we become more familiar with the concept (s)(i.e., training provided via computer or digital device, where technology can facilitate learning anytime, anywhere).
The term «middle school» is an unassuming part of the vernacular of our educational system.
Over the last decade, the term instructional leader has worked its way into the vernacular of the education community to describe the role of school principals.
The term «bankruptcy» in the popular vernacular is used broadly, but in fact there are many types of bankruptcy proceedings.
Though the art world may not yet have a satisfactory way of referring to artists like Mullen, who are variously described by such leaky terms as self - taught, outsider, and vernacular, it has, over the past few years, shown more interest in them and is gradually growing the existing market for their work.
Folk, naïve, vernacular, visionary, outsider, self - taught — over the past century, a range of terms has emerged to describe artists who rose to prominence despite a lack of formal training.
Terms such as space, perspective, creativity, movement, and abstraction itself are being explored and illustrated by the artist via his own popular vernacular.
Artist and critic Brian O'Doherty coined the term «vernacular glance» in 1973 to describe Rauschenberg's relationship to image culture.
2.10 pm Tanya Harrod responds to the current CAS display by looking back to the confident taxonomies of the last century and considering the terms craft, art, design, vernacular, folk and the value they carry.
This exhibition at James Cohan Gallery seeks to develop these earlier ideas around what I termed «vernacular» or «everyday» abstraction: that is artistic practices that actively privilege and operate in the grey area between an essentially non-representational image / object and the use of quotidian materials and processes.
Originally employed as a linguistics term, vernacular is now broadly applied to categories of culture, standing in for «regional,» «folkloric,» or «homemade» — concepts that contemporary artists have investigated since the late 1950s as part of a deeper consideration of the relationship between art and everyday life.
The project experiments with redefining the concepts, terms, and vernacular associated with the United States social contract and notions of patriotism.
Originally employed as a linguistics term, vernacular is now broadly applied to categories of culture, standing in for «regional,» «folkloric,» or «homemade» - concepts that contemporary artists have investigated since the late 1950s as part of a deeper consideration of the relationship between art and everyday life.
Termed an outsider artist, a vernacular artist, and a folk artist, among other labels, Dial, who was African American, was one of just a few self - taught artists who, over the past century, began making art well beyond the borders of the predominantly urban, white mainstream art world but who would eventually find a form of success within it.
Use technical terms with vernacular meanings («it's just a theory»), use professional jargon in an out - of - context way («Mike's Nature trick»), and focus on a playful turn of phrase instead of the substantive science (as if it wasn't blatantly obvious that Ray was referring to a substantial body of work from the past decade plus).
When I broached that notion to him this afternoon on the phone, he agreed, replying: «When the Endangered Species Act was adopted in 1973, I don't think terms like «climate change» were part of our vernacular.»]
His term for this is «Vernacular 2.0.»
«Fake News» wasn't in the vernacular two years ago, but it's an everyday term now — and is quickly becoming an everyday challenge.
And it has been just five years since the terms «TAR» and «predictive coding» first began to filter into the legal profession's vernacular.
At each of them, Big Data was discussed, which isn't surprising because that term is now a part of the legal services vernacular.
The question is: do the documents in dispute, ie, MSP and Pharmanet, come withing the terms of either Rule 7 - 1 (1)(a), ie, documents that can be used by a party of record to prove or disprove a material fact or that will be referred to at trial or, if not, do they come under category 7 - 1 (11), generally, in the vernacular, referred to as the Guano documents... There is no question that there is a higher duty on a party requesting documents under the second category... that in addition to requesting, they must explain and satisfy either the party being demanded or the court, if an order is sought, with an explanation «with reasonable specificity that indicates the reason why such additional documents or classes of documents should be disclosed», and again, there is no doubt that the new Rules have limited the obligation for production in the first instance to the first category that I have described and has reduced or lessened the obligation for production in general...
The term «hard fork» has become part of blockchain vernacular following the launch of bitcoin cash Aug. 1.
Use crisp, succinct and direct language avoiding poetic, bureaucratic, vernacular and academic terms that often tend to turn off readers.
The common vernacular to describe how our income is generated includes both of the terms «commission» and «fee».
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