vernacular

noun
/vəˈnækjələ/UK/vɚˈnækjəlɚ/US

Etymology

From Latin vernāculus (“domestic, indigenous, of or pertaining to home-born slaves”), from verna (“a native, a home-born slave (one born in his master's house)”).

  1. derived from vernāculus — “domestic, indigenous, of or pertaining to home-born slaves

Definitions

  1. The language of a people or a national language.

    • The principal vernacular of the United States is English.
    • The idea that the Bible should be translated into vernaculars was explosive in medieval society.
  2. Everyday speech or dialect, including colloquialisms, as opposed to standard, literary,…

    Everyday speech or dialect, including colloquialisms, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.

    • Near-synonyms: basilect, demotic
    • Street vernacular can be quite different from what is heard elsewhere.
  3. Language unique to a particular group of people.

    • Near-synonyms: jargon, argot, dialect, slang
    • For those of a certain age, hiphop vernacular might just as well be a foreign language.
  4. + 8 more definitions
    1. A language lacking standardization or a written form.

    2. Indigenous spoken language, as distinct from a literary or liturgical language such as…

      Indigenous spoken language, as distinct from a literary or liturgical language such as Ecclesiastical Latin.

      • Vatican II, a church council in the 1960s, allowed the celebration of the mass in the vernacular.
    3. A style of architecture involving local building materials and styles

      A style of architecture involving local building materials and styles; not imported.

    4. Of or pertaining to everyday language, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or…

      Of or pertaining to everyday language, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.

      • Near-synonyms: common, everyday, indigenous, ordinary, vulgar, colloquial, basilectal, demotic
    5. Belonging to the country of one's birth

      Belonging to the country of one's birth; one's own by birth or by nature.

      • Near-synonyms: native, indigenous; endemic
      • a vernacular disease
    6. Of or related to local building materials and styles

      Of or related to local building materials and styles; not imported.

    7. Connected to a collective memory

      Connected to a collective memory; not imported.

    8. Not attempting to use the rules of a taxonomic code, especially, not using scientific…

      Not attempting to use the rules of a taxonomic code, especially, not using scientific Latin.

      • An English vernacular name for Rosa multiflora is multiflora rose.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for vernacular. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA