dialect


تلفظ آنلاینIELTS vocabulary

dialect /ˈdaɪəlekt/ noun [uncountable and countable]

لهجه، زبان محلی، گویش، کامپیوتر: نسخه خاصی از یک زبان کامپیوتر، روانشناسی: لهجه
ارسال ایمیل

▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼

به صفحه تحلیلگران در Instagram بپیوندیددر صفحه اینستاگرام آموزشگاه مجازی تحلیلگران، هر روز یک نکته جدید خواهید آموخت.
نسخه ویندوز دیکشنری تحلیلگران (آفلاین)بیش از 350,000 لغت و اصطلاح زبان انگلیسی براساس واژه های رایج و کاربردی لغت نامه های معتبر
الکترونیک: نسخه خاصی از یک زبان کامپیوتر، کامپیوتر: گویش، لهجه، روانشناسی: لهجه، زبان محلی، گویش

[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary

dialect
[noun]
Synonyms: language, brogue, idiom, jargon, patois, provincialism, speech, vernacular
Related Words: localism, provincialism, regionalism
English Thesaurus: dialect, accent, slang, terminology, jargon, ...

[TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary

dialect /ˈdaɪəlekt/ noun [uncountable and countable]
[Date: 1500-1600; Language: French; Origin: dialecte, from Greek dialektos 'conversation, dialect', from dialegesthai 'to talk to someone']
a form of a language which is spoken only in one area, with words or grammar that are slightly different from other forms of the same language ⇒ accent
Chinese/Yorkshire etc dialect
The people up there speak a Tibetan dialect.
the local dialect

[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English

dialect
noun
ADJ. local, native, regional | non-standard | northern, southern, etc. | Scottish, Ulster, etc.
VERB + DIALECT speak (in)
DIALECT + NOUN expression, form, word | speaker

[TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary

dialect a form of a language that is spoken in one area of a country, with different words, grammar, or pronunciation from other areas:
Cantonese is only one of many Chinese dialects.
the local dialect
accent the way that someone pronounces words, because of where they were born or live, or their social class:
Karen has a strong New Jersey accent.
an upper class accent
slang very informal spoken language, used especially by people who belong to a particular group, for example young people or criminals:
Teenage slang changes all the time.
‘Dosh’ is slang for ‘money’.
terminology formal the technical words or expressions that are used in a particular subject:
musical terminology
Patients are often unfamiliar with medical terminology.
jargon especially disapproving words and phrases used in a particular profession or subject and which are difficult for other people to understand:
The instructions were written in complicated technical jargon.
‘Outsourcing’ is business jargon for sending work to people outside a company to do.
The letter was full of legal jargon.
metaphor a way of describing something by referring to it as something different and suggesting that it has similar qualities to that thing:
The beehive is a metaphor for human society.
simile an expression that describes something by comparing it with something else, using the words as or like, for example ‘as white as snow’:
The poet uses the simile ‘soft like clay’.
irony the use of words that are the opposite of what you really mean, often in order to be amusing:
‘I’m so happy to hear that,’ he said, with more than a trace of irony in his voice.
bathos a sudden change from a subject that is beautiful, moral, or serious to something that is ordinary, silly, or not important:
The play is too sentimental and full of bathos.
hyperbole a way of describing something by saying that it is much bigger, smaller, worse etc than it actually is – used especially to excite people’s feelings:
In his speeches, he used a lot of hyperbole.
journalistic hyperbole
alliteration the use of several words together that all begin with the same sound, in order to make a special effect, especially in poetry:
the alliteration of the ‘s’ sound in ‘sweet birds sang softly’
imagery the use of words to describe ideas or actions in a way that makes the reader connect the ideas with pictures in their mind:
the use of water imagery in Fitzgerald’s novel ‘The Great Gatsby’
She uses the imagery of a bird’s song to represent eternal hope.
rhetorical question a question that you ask as a way of making a statement, without expecting an answer:
When he said ‘how can these attitudes still exist in a civilized society?’, he was asking a rhetorical question.

[TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus


TahlilGaran Online Dictionary ver 18.0
All rights reserved, Copyright © Alireza Motamed.

TahlilGaran : دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی dialect ) | علیرضا معتمد , دیکشنری تحلیلگران , وب اپلیکیشن , تحلیلگران , دیکشنری , آنلاین , آیفون , IOS , آموزش مجازی 4.63 : 2056
4.63دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی dialect )
دیکشنری تحلیلگران (وب اپلیکیشن، ویژه کاربران آیفون، IOS) | دیکشنری آنلاین تحلیلگران ( معنی dialect ) | موسس و مدیر مسئول :