vernacularism

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for vernacularism
Noun
  • His defense of biblical inerrancy against the modernism of mainstream Bible scholars had laid the intellectual foundation for the future of evangelical Protestantism.
    Austin Steelman / Made by History, TIME, 12 Mar. 2025
  • But the move also speaks to the role African art played in French modernism, from Picasso’s Cubist forms to Modigliani’s masklike portraits.
    Kelly Presutti, ARTnews.com, 12 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • You would be forgiven for assuming this a playful colloquialism, perhaps revealing a tenderness to the hunt.
    Cecilia Rodriguez, Forbes, 6 Mar. 2025
  • Black communities are usually at the creative vanguard, from Renaissance art movements to fashion and even colloquialisms.
    Jasmine Browley, Essence, 3 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • The phrase is typically a euphemism for leaving discreetly, often to use the restroom.
    Russel Honoré, Newsweek, 5 Mar. 2025
  • After sixteen months of watching a genocide happen in real time—with more-or-less total support from Western governments, despite the euphemisms and justifications skillfully woven by headlines and political speeches—the contradiction is becoming harder to ignore.
    Hazlitt, Hazlitt, 27 Feb. 2025
Noun
  • The Treasurer serves as the custodian and trustee of the federal government's collateral assets and the supervisor of the department's currency and coinage production functions.
    Kelly Phillips Erb, Forbes, 18 Jan. 2025
  • More than 70 years before the coinage of the term, W.E.B. DuBois anticipated Afrofuturism with his 1920 short story The Comet.
    Shantay Robinson, ARTnews.com, 3 Sep. 2019
Noun
  • In interviews, Twigs disbursed the meanings behind her neologism, her philosophy.
    Doreen St. Félix, The New Yorker, 1 Feb. 2025
  • Perhaps that’s why we’ve been bombarded with so many neologisms to describe mind states, like brain rot, or Eusexua.
    Spencer Kornhaber, The Atlantic, 28 Jan. 2025
Noun
  • Narrator Mary Lewis, raised in Newfoundland herself, delivers the book in a manner that seems stilted at first but grows more appealing as Lewis moves further into the story, with its pleasing archaisms and evocation of balked communication.
    Katherine A. Powers, Washington Post, 21 Jan. 2020
  • That phrase, which may strike some young American ears as an archaism if not an oxymoron, is worth unpacking, and Amis provides readers with a pocket account of the historical preconditions of his extravagant fame.
    A.O. SCOTT, New York Times, 28 Feb. 2018
Noun
  • In fact, Mandarin itself used thousands of loanwords from Japanese and English when new disciplines such as sociology and natural science entered China’s curricula a mere century ago.
    Tenzin Dorjee, Foreign Affairs, 28 Nov. 2023
  • During this period, more than 10,000 loanwords from French entered the English language, mostly in domains where the aristocracy held sway: the arts, military, medicine, law and religion.
    Phillip M. Carter, Fortune Well, 12 June 2023
Noun
  • Asian animation continues to evolve and grow its profile on the global stage in both artistic and commercial terms.
    Jamie Lang, Variety, 17 Mar. 2025
  • The term was adopted into English in the early 19th century, especially in the context of cattle herding in the American West.
    Erik Kain, Forbes, 17 Mar. 2025
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Cite this Entry

“Vernacularism.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/vernacularism. Accessed 27 Mar. 2025.

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