English to Portuguese Dictionary colloquial

colloquial

coloquial
definition
adjective
I had four or five Chinese dialects at my disposal, phrases in colloquial English, and of course, Malay.
(of language) used in ordinary or familiar conversation; not formal or literary.
translation of 'colloquial'
adjective
coloquial
example
In all these collections, Neruda turns to a simple style and 'colloquial' language to talk about objects of everyday life.
He uses refined 'colloquial' language with a rhythm that is light and quick, an unhesitating flow that propels the poem and carries the reader.
His highly 'colloquial' use of the language had seemed cute at first.
Your purchase is rational in the normal, 'colloquial' sense of the word but not necessarily in the social science meaning.
This is the origin of the 'colloquial' use of ‘coconut’ to refer to one's head.
Her ear for 'colloquial' phrases and conversational interplay is equally impressive.
Often they alone preserved the 'colloquial' speech, the real language of everyday use.
The production cries out for a better translation than the uncredited one that veers between stilted and 'colloquial' .
A boom is a 'colloquial' term for an economy that is expanding above the GDP's average annual growth.
Second, the Arabic tutor will most likely be teaching you a 'colloquial' form of Arabic rather than modern standard Arabic.
The language is often 'colloquial' and vigorous.
I had four or five Chinese dialects at my disposal, phrases in 'colloquial' English, and of course, Malay.
Shepard has a gift for combining lyrical description with a 'colloquial' voice.
She taught 'colloquial' English at Tsuruga College in Japan at the age of 16 as part of an exchange program.
Ira had a great ear for 'colloquial' language, especially the language of sports.
However, until the 1920s, few local recipe books used the 'colloquial' name, and then sometimes only as a subtitle.
If I need to respond, I do so in 'colloquial' English using my thickest Northern accent.
Either it was done in a great hurry, or the translator has only a passing acquaintance with 'colloquial' English.
In some places the use of more 'colloquial' language seems to work and not detract from the original gospels, but in other places it came across to me as contrived.
It is to this group of ancient hominids that the term ‘ape man’ is most commonly applied today, but the term is informal or 'colloquial' .
Unchecked, it leads to changes in posture, particularly in the form of a hunched back known 'colloquially' as dowager's hump, and decreased mobility.
I know I can write 'colloquially' but I really do lose confidence when I have to prepare formal briefing papers.
Countries in permanent crisis, with the population at subsistence level, more or less chaotic, but without total civil strife, are known 'colloquially' as ‘basket cases’.
To find your real e-mail, you must wade through the torrent of fraud and obscenity known politely as " unsolicited bulk e-mail " and 'colloquially' as spam.
Put 'colloquially' , the vision of multiculturalism is that you don't have to be same to be equal.
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