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101 العربية
العَرَبِيّة: اللّغَةُ العَرَبِيّةArabic, the Arabic language -
102 اللاتينية
اللاّتِينِيّة: اللّغَةُ اللاّتِينِيّةLatin, the Latin language -
103 ابتذل
اِبْتَذَلَ: تَرَكَ الاحْتِشَامَto violate accepted standards of good manners, be indecorous, be indecent, be indelicate; to display vulgar manners; to use abusive language; to act immorally -
104 تأنق لفظي أو بياني
تَأنّقٌ لَفْظِيّ أو بَيَانِيّ: تَنْمِيقٌ في الأُسْلُوبeuphuism, floridness, floweriness, grandiloquence, ornateness of style, pomposity of speech, affected elegance of language -
105 تنميق في الأسلوب
تَنْمِيقٌ في الأُسْلُوب: تَأنّقٌ لَفْظِيّ أو بَيَانِيّ إلخeuphuism, floridness, floweriness, ornateness, grandiloquence, pomposity, (affected) elegance of style or language -
106 تنوين
تَنْوِين [لغة]nunnation: the addition of a final "n" to words (mostly in pronunciation only) as in the Arabic language -
107 جزالة
جَزَالَة: فَصَاحَةeloquence; purity of language or style -
108 عبري
عِبْرِيّ، العِبْرِيّHebrew, Hebraic; a Hebrew; Hebrew, the Hebrew language -
109 العبري
عِبْرِيّ، العِبْرِيّHebrew, Hebraic; a Hebrew; Hebrew, the Hebrew language -
110 فحش
فُحْش: بَذَاءَةobscenity, ribaldry, vulgarity, indecency, filth, bawdiness, shamelessness; obscene language -
111 قذع
قَذَعٌ: فُحْشٌ في الكَلام، بَذَاءَةٌobscene language; obscenity, ribaldry, vulgarity, indecency -
112 كلام
كَلاَم: حَدِيث، قَوْلtalk, speech; talking, speaking; conversation; word(s), utterance, statement, remark; language -
113 لهجة
لَهْجَة: لُغَة، لَكْنَةdialect; language; tongue accent; tone; manner of speaking -
114 لغة
لُغَة: لِسَانlanguage, tongue -
115 لسان
لِسَان: لُغَةlanguage, tongue -
116 موال
مَوّال: مَوَالِيَاfolk song in colloquial language; roundelay -
117 نقل
نَقَلَ (مِنْ لُغَةٍ إلى أُخْرَى): تَرْجَمَ -
118 هاجرة
هاجِرَة: كَلاَمٌ قَبِيحobscene language, obscenity -
119 هجر
هُجْر، هَجْراء: كَلاَمٌ قَبِيحobscene language, obscenity -
120 هجراء
هُجْر، هَجْراء: كَلاَمٌ قَبِيحobscene language, obscenity
См. также в других словарях:
Language — language … Dictionary of sociology
language — lan‧guage [ˈlæŋgwɪdʒ] noun 1. [countable, uncountable] a system of speaking and writing used by people in one country or area: • the French language • Do you speak any foreign languages? • Trading in Europe means communicating in more than one… … Financial and business terms
Language — Lan guage, n. [OE. langage, F. langage, fr. L. lingua the tongue, hence speech, language; akin to E. tongue. See {Tongue}, cf. {Lingual}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Any means of conveying or communicating ideas; specifically, human speech; the expression … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
language — 1 Language, dialect, tongue, speech, idiom are comparable when they denote a body or system of words and phrases used by a large community (as of a region) or by a people, a nation, or a group of nations. Language may be used as a general term… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
language — [laŋ′gwij] n. [ME < OFr langage < langue, tongue < L lingua, tongue, language, altered (by assoc. with lingere, to lick) < OL dingua < IE * dṇg̑hwa > OE tunge, TONGUE] 1. a) human speech b) Archaic the ability to communicate by… … English World dictionary
language — I noun communication, composition, dialect, expression, faculty of speech, folk speech, form of expression, formulation, idiom, jargon, lingua, linguistics, means of communication, oral, oratio, parlance, phrasing, phraseology, rhetoric, sermo,… … Law dictionary
language — late 13c., langage words, what is said, conversation, talk, from O.Fr. langage (12c.), from V.L. *linguaticum, from L. lingua tongue, also speech, language (see LINGUAL (Cf. lingual)). The form with u developed in Anglo French. Meaning a language … Etymology dictionary
language — ► NOUN 1) the method of human communication, either spoken or written, consisting of the use of words in a structured and conventional way. 2) the system of communication used by a particular community or country. 3) the phraseology and… … English terms dictionary
Language — Lan guage, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Languaged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Languaging}.] To communicate by language; to express in language. [1913 Webster] Others were languaged in such doubtful expressions that they have a double sense. Fuller. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
language — language, philosophy of … Philosophy dictionary
language — [n] system of words for communication accent, argot, articulation, brogue, cant, communication, conversation, dialect, diction, dictionary, discourse, doublespeak*, expression, gibberish, idiom, interchange, jargon, lexicon, lingua franca,… … New thesaurus