Sentence examples for the current parlance from inspiring English sources

Exact(12)

In the current parlance of astronomers, however, Vesta and Ceres, like Pluto, are dwarf planets, not planets.

The shorts he's wearing now come from AllSaints Spitalfields, an English clothing store that Wesley and I, to use the current parlance, are "obsessed with".

At the risk of sounding like a broken record (disk in the current parlance), I have to put Beaujolais high on the summer list.

My MobiPak™ whirred.… Internationally famous architects — "starchitects," in the current parlance — tend to be the sort of people who fly constantly around the world, perhaps alighting in Rome to toss… Colonel Roosevelt, by Edmund Morris (Random House; $35).

For its opening weekend, Zankel is offering eight performances, programmed -- or curated, in the current parlance -- by John Adams, who takes over the Carnegie Hall Composer's Chair this season.

Internationally famous architects — "starchitects," in the current parlance — tend to be the sort of people who fly constantly around the world, perhaps alighting in Rome to toss off a museum (Zaha Hadid), or in Minneapolis to design a theatre (Jean Nouvel), or in Beijing to do whatever the Chinese will pay for (Rem Koolhaas, Steven Holl, Herzog & de Meuron, and just about everyone else).

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Similar(48)

Happy families The red lines What might have been, perhaps ReprintsThe airing of dirty laundry this entailed appears to have been considered a crossing of "red lines"—the current Arabic parlance for the point where pretences at civility stop.

The Subaru Impreza Turbo – the WRX STi in current parlance – should have blown out in a cloud of atomised rubber, roasted clutch and whistling overboost.

Even the word sounds antiquated: current parlance favors the more "Top Gun -ian term, winGun -ian

It feeds an insatiable curiosity about how the other half — or, in current parlance, the 1 percent — lives, and what it shows us is gorgeous, grotesque and disconcertingly human.

Russia in the late 19th century had no legal parties or trade unions, no parliament, limited schooling and no avenues out of poverty for the poor.As a result, Russia proved highly susceptible to the lure of what, in current parlance, would be called wingnuts (fanatics on the far left or right).

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