Sentence examples for jargon for example from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

He drew his mother drowning in medical jargon, for example, and walking the tightrope that was balancing her medication.

You can feel lost in the TV debates as there's a lot of political jargon for example people don't really know the difference between debt and deficit.

The company's software does the rest.Biometric data can, however, be cloned, as when someone's fingerprints are "skimmed" from something he touched and replicated (or "spoofed" in the jargon), for example by etching a print onto a jelly mould.

These data can be cloned, as when someone's fingerprints are "skimmed" from something he has touched and replicated (or "spoofed" in the jargon), for example by etching a print onto a jelly mould.

Similar(55)

The golden age of British television was good in many respects in its lack of jargon and committees for example—but could be fearfully stingy.

The book sometimes uses jargon and tautology (for example, that it's easier to assess what someone has done than what he hasn't).

In casual conversation, he throws around lots of traffic enforcement jargon -- an appliance user, for example, is his term for a police officer who sees his radar merely as a tool for writing tickets, not as the super-cool technological toy that it is.

Apart from carefully considering the content of informed consent procedures, the impact of training research team members in communication skills (for example, limited jargon and pausing after every sentence to allow opportunities for questions) on research subjects' participation and comprehension should be examined in future research.

And the more the audience understands the language of the joke, for example, the particular jargon of a profession, the better it is received.

These examples of duplicate translations aren't egregiously wasteful, but there are probably places where including an unnecessary translation uses up precious space or time, or costs more to print.Many words, such as terms for popular food products (coffee, for example) or scientific jargon, are similar or identical in otherwise unrelated languages.

For example, scientists use jargon because, within their community, it speeds up communication.

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