parlance in the Oxford-Hachette French Dictionary

parlance in the PONS Dictionary

parlance Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

in common parlance
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
In music industry parlance, the amplifiers and some of the instruments are nicknamed the backline.
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In modern parlance, the term newsreader or news anchor is preferred.
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Then there is spaghetti or "ispageti" in the local parlance that is a modified version of spaghetti bolognese.
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For this reason, the initial 60 minutes following a traumatic incident is often called the critical hour in emergency medicine parlance.
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His visionary perspective shaped a discourse on sustainable practices in the corporate world long before going green was common parlance.
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As a result, the term eureka entered common parlance and is used today to indicate a moment of enlightenment.
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The term "suspect" had been in common parlance by 1793, but had not been defined by consensus.
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The actual term restaurant did not enter into the common parlance until the following century.
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In wizard parlance, a creature with human intelligence including a person is called a being.
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Nicknamed three-wheelers or tuk-tuks in popular parlance, they are a motorized version of the traditional rickshaw or velotaxi.
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