parlance

কথন
definition
noun
dated terms that were once in common parlance
a particular way of speaking or using words, especially a way common to those with a particular job or interest.
translation of 'parlance'
কথোপকথন
noun
বাচনভঙ্গি,
বাক্যালাপ,
ভাষা,
কথন
example
medical 'parlance'
In common academic 'parlance' , a removal from the classroom, even if with full pay, is a suspension.
Then of course we have the emergence of words like funner and funnest into common 'parlance' .
What other phrases from popular TV shows can you think of that have slipped into common 'parlance' ?
Both are seeds, in the language of botany or natural history, but not in commerce nor in common 'parlance' .
By which he meant in modern 'parlance' that Americans shared a common culture which made republican government possible.
dated terms that were once in common 'parlance'
medical 'parlance'
That win had to be shared because, in cricketing 'parlance' , bad light stopped play at Valderrama.
dated terms that were once in common 'parlance'
Perhaps in ordinary 'parlance' this is disclosure of confidential information in the interests of the bank.
In ordinary 'parlance' , a conspiracy theory describes something preposterous or paranoid.
Is there a justification for retaining the word in literature from the past, when its use would have reflected common 'parlance' ?
I am all for American regional cookery and the trappings of taste, custom, and 'parlance' that go with each.
It is common 'parlance' and part of our living language.
Just don't get caught up in all the Washington fancy talk and 'parlance' .
They have become far too acceptable in common 'parlance' on a regular basis.
It is true that these are terms of public 'parlance' , rather than of popular speech.
However, hearing Irish as it is spoken makes you realise how polluted and Anglofied it has become in common 'parlance' .
In modern 'parlance' this word quickly conjures up notions of government regulation and regulated industries.
It is the pragmatic, common sense solution, known in cemetery 'parlance' as ‘lift and deepen’.
Freudian language has seeped into common 'parlance' like that of no other writer since Shakespeare.
More crucially, who decided that these words could be used in common 'parlance' without explanation?
So they formed rock bands, partied all night - became, in the local 'parlance' , ‘slackers’.
Credits: Google Translate