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1. argot: the specialized vocabulary and idioms of those in the same work or way of life, especially of the underworld. The French origin, meaning to beg associated beggary with thievery. 2. aspersion: act of defaming; a damaging or disparaging remark; a sprinkling of water, as in baptizing. This final definition, now rare, is based on an archaic meaning of the original Latin word for sprinkle The modern definition refers to sprinkling a few maliciously chosen words to vilify someone. 3. badinage: playful, teasing talk, banter 4. bombast: originally a soft material used for padding, talk or writing the sounds grand or important but has little meaning; pompous language. Bombastic refers to speech or writing that is heavily padded with words; grandiloquent suggests grandiose language and an oratorical effect; turgid suggests the style has obscured the meaning. 5. braggadocio: a braggart; pretentiousness; vain, noisy, or bragging swaggering manner. The word was coined by Edmund Spenser for his personification of boasting in the Faerie Queena 6. censure: strong disapproval; a judgement or resolution condemning a person for misconduct. 7. countermand: to cancel or revoke a command; to call back by a contrary order 8. gainsay: to deny; to speak or act against contradiction; denial 9. gobbledegook: wordy and generally unintelligible jargon; specialized language of a group of people that is usually wordy and complicated and often incomprehensible to an outsider; a meaningless jumble of words. 10. guttural: of the throat, a harsh, rasping sound. 11. harangue: a long, blustering, noisy, or scolding speech, tirade. The original Italian word meant a site for horse races and public assembles. 12. jargon: a language or dialect unknown to one so that it seems incomprehensible; a mixed or hybrid language or dialect, especially pidgin, specialized idioms of those in the same work, profession, speech or writing full of long, unfamiliar; or roundabout words or phrases. The Middle French root means a chattering of birds The word is ultimately of echoic origin.
13. mellifluous: sounding sweet and smooth, honeyed 14. resonant: echoing, reinforced and prolonged by reflection or by sympathetic vibration of other bodies. The word has specialized uses in various fields-chemistry, electricity, medicine, phonetics, physics. 15. sententious: abounding in pithy aphorisms or maxims; terse; self-righteous.
(gobbledegook, argot, countermand) 9. Franks threats are not as frightening as the sound (aspersion, bombast, censure) 10. An incomprehensible language (argon, sententious, guttural)
5. rhapsodic
peccadillo
falsetto
bombastic