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"vernacular" Definitions
  1. (of language) spoken by ordinary people in a particular country or region; using a vernacular language
  2. (specialist) (of architecture ) in a style that is used for ordinary houses rather than large public buildings

559 Sentences With "vernacular"

How to use vernacular in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "vernacular" and check conjugation/comparative form for "vernacular". Mastering all the usages of "vernacular" from sentence examples published by news publications.

These high-fashion versions of vernacular forms suggest that there is no obstacle to making the vernacular aesthetic a luxury proposition.
These high-fashion versions of vernacular forms suggest that there is no obstacle to making the vernacular aesthetic a luxury proposition.
Sawada uses the vernacular of public photo booths in much the same way that Gaignard uses the vernacular of American Dream fulfillment in her photography.
"Begging," that simple word, has a particular black vernacular ring.
The ultimate test is, of course: will the vernacular change?
A lot of writers don't use the vernacular, pidgin, etc.
" Ellis continued: "This vernacular to 'sing' is what prosecutors use.
In the vernacular of climbing, I became a dirt bag.
Most of the time he speaks in the everyday vernacular.
Its music was a refinement of an intensely vernacular sound.
Or, put in "Simpsons" vernacular: HA HA (Nelson Muntz voice).
So far, spiritualism has proved Swann's most valuable vernacular subject.
Now, it seems, the phrase has officially entered pop culture vernacular.
Dlugos uses the vernacular to apprehend the figure he is describing.
In Kenya, vernacular radio stations are more influential than those things.
The issue is known in aviation vernacular as runaway stabilizer trim.
Footnote acknowledging the passing of some 2007 vernacular: RIP "hee hee".
It's just updated in a way, told in a different vernacular.
I chose projects that in someway spoke about vernacular Caribbean culture.
The term crowdfunding was not yet part of the common vernacular.
We're cultivating a vernacular to understand our images beyond stilted paradigms.
The words "slut" and "whore" aren't part of the Playboy vernacular.
Il volgare meant, in Italian, the vernacular, non-Latin, language. 2.
Such language was very much the vernacular during his political upbringing.
It is, in the vernacular of popular culture, a double whammy.
The language ranges from Victorian pastiche to modern vernacular and inanity.
She has been closely studying the vernacular of first lady dress.
Mohit said the startup plans to launch programs in vernacular languages.
All the international, multiethnic, multicolored vernacular architecture got banished to the midway.
At Hales Gallery, Vernacular Interior explores home across sites lived and imagined.
The internet offers yet more chances for Egyptians to explore their vernacular.
Few vocabularies are as rich as the vernacular used by baseball scouts.
"The vernacular has changed over the last couple of years," said Zier.
The phrase first made its appearance in the English vernacular in 1845.
" Vernacular means "expressed or written in the native language of a place.
Restoring 'Merry Christmas' to the American vernacular A little before 10 p.m.
In the vernacular, Uber is now both a noun and a verb.
Voting has, in the vernacular of terror, become the new soft target.
When something becomes part of your vernacular, it's remarkably hard to remove.
Not in the watered-down, common vernacular way that means really good.
The United States has had a long love affair with vernacular heroes.
He was not beyond threatening reporters in the vernacular of a mobster.
There's a sort of Shakespearean heightening of vernacular going on, isn't there?
His Twitter vernacular now appears to have expanded to include the subtweet.
"I saw your comp numbers," vernacular for what I was paying to who.
Many women are making the same choice, and "pivoting," also now-common vernacular.
She selected the photographs she wanted to write about to explore vernacular photography.
The officer called one commenter a "ghetto ass" and mocked black vernacular speech.
Many meetings later the choice fell on the Beijing vernacular as the basis.
My friends and I slipped her signature phrase — "It's handled" — into our vernacular.
The Kardashians are responsible for introducing many different words into our everyday vernacular.
The nine artists in Vernacular Interior explore home across sites lived and imagined.
This is where you come to find it because it's in the vernacular.
A wood ape is the local vernacular for a Sasquatch or a Bigfoot.
Guess what Trump might say about that in his finest New York vernacular.
In investors' vernacular: They need to begin hedging their bets on the report.
He speaks in the vernacular of a salty barman who has seen things.
Likewise, photographers of the 1960s also experimented with color, collage, and vernacular materials.
Much of the FBI's evident lexicon and vernacular are still stubbornly Hooveresque today.
Over time, Arabs came to associate any encouragement of vernacular writing with colonialism.
On the bench, to put it in the vernacular, don't be a jerk.
Nothing fancy or luxury, just styles so mainstream as to be almost vernacular.
And we've learned from local vernacular how to use simple materials and techniques.
These were deeply pluralistic thanks to the different vernacular cultures that practiced them.
It's stories of regular people turning into gods, essentially, in a modern vernacular.
Its author, Murasaki Shikibu, a woman of high privilege, wrote in vernacular Japanese.
Rosen has drawn inspiration from vernacular architecture as well as the history of vessels.
"In 'The Bachelor' vernacular, I think I'm pretty awesome," Hanks said, accepting the dare.
It's a convincing Marxist parable told through the limited vernacular of the Ashcan School.
Mr Kinnear's goal is to make the iambic pentameter seem as vernacular as artificial.
Eight. (Who are they again?) Trump speaks in the vernacular of a third-grader,
Thus, as the platform grew, the Ven-moji became a vernacular all their own.
The tweets were written in Trump's vernacular and viewed as mocking by many Republicans.
This was also the time that fintech became a greater part of the vernacular.
The wording he was using, the vernacular, the language was not from a layperson.
"Icahn was always talking about an 'executive order'—that was his vernacular," Dinneen recalled.
It is true that the long vernacular passages sometimes make "Barracoon" difficult to read.
To use a vernacular formulation, a hard-power problem requires a hard-power approach.
They're known for creating photos that fuse the vernacular of commercial photography with surrealism.
What these preeminent individuals have in common is a love for the American vernacular.
This is one of the first novels to capture — indeed, define — the American vernacular.
Devotion to Mary has a distinct place in Ethiopian society and its feminine vernacular.
In their vernacular, competitiveness and flexibility are just euphemisms for diminished livelihood and anxiety.
In the Chang vernacular, it looks bonkers, and you'll want to crush it. video
Ed Life, in the in-house vernacular, has tried to explain this complex world.
The new vernacular replaces the professional with the personal and titles with first names.
He showed her the e-mails, and Rinaldi was impressed by Bourdain's bawdy vernacular.
The work's found objects and ad hoc construction also reflect a dominant sculptural vernacular.
The vernacular for him and those like him already existed; it was nothing new.
No matter, this is one of those vernacular terms like MOMMA that can vary.
He brings together the vernacular, the ornate, and the whimsical on the same page.
As Paper Magazine explained, the word "boi" has origins in African-American Vernacular English.
While teaching in the architecture department at Oxford Brookes University, he edited two monumental reference works: the three-volume Encylopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World (1997) and, with Marcel Vellinga and Alexander Bridge, "Atlas of Vernacular Architecture of the World" (2007).
As with any new technology, terms can enter people's vernacular before they are fully understood.
To me, that's really cool that we did these weird things that permeated people's vernacular.
Causing a grammatical ruckus: It's getting heated enough to cause a hot sauce vernacular rumble.
The vernacular of the everyday became the basis of modernism, out of which photography came.
Unlike the foreign-run mosques of the first generation, it packaged Islam in the vernacular.
"One gotta go forever," the text above the photograph read, aping the vernacular of millennials.
"That became how we found the vernacular for the rest of the lyrics," said Paul.
"  The boxing promoter explained his use of the word as "the vernacular of the street.
It's been far too long since we've seen Bronn and heard his questionably modern vernacular.
It has its own iconography and vernacular, derived from message boards, video games and pornography.
OVER the past century, one typeface has come to dominate the visual vernacular of London.
There is no word in the English vernacular for the state of being a refugee.
" It sounds like they are asking, in New York vernacular, "What's there not to like?
Many economists now discuss Europe's prospects with the grim vernacular long used to describe Japan.
The video is an animation and the visual vernacular and storytelling is of the region.
" Writing in the local pidgin vernacular, Ighalo asked fans to remember he was "someone's child.
Exhibitions of vernacular photography tend to have a cutoff date in the 1970s or '80s.
"It allows you to engage with others on their terms, their vernacular tastes," he said.
Handstands and guns appear, ghostly music, exigency — the passage bursts with vernacular gumption, prismatic parlance.
In today's vernacular, too many entitlement programs rob a body of the desire to work.
The term self-care has, over the past few years, become part of the vernacular.
Their descendants still speak a unique Creole language, Papiamento, the vernacular of all native Bonaireans.
Perhaps no dialect has come under more hysterical attack than African-American Vernacular English (AAVE).
Kirk Amaral Snow's Conspicuous Consumption is a minimalist cardboard structure that reframes vernacular architecture and infrastructure.
Memes are the new vernacular of political culture and we dismiss them at our own peril.
Or, feature examples of the vernacular art and visual culture that already exists in each neighborhood?
He speaks in a kind of vernacular poetry that gets into the mind and stays there.
It's so widespread that an entire subculture and attendant vernacular has developed around ripping them off.
Written largely in the vernacular, they stirred up controversy so successfully that the censors stepped in.
In the common vernacular, "to Venmo" means to move money to and from friends and family.
Those combinations are not unlike the taste of Mr. Hoffman's vernacular, mystical cocktail of a play.
This isn't a story about punctuation dying; it's a story about a new vernacular being born.
BANNON: I think he speaks in a particular vernacular that connects to people in this country.
But virtually no one disputes that they helped document some of America's most important vernacular music.
They too used vernacular Bibles and produced a literature, of which a few long poems survive.
Added to this, the word "Brexit" became part of the vernacular much more easily than "Bremain".
To my surprise, her son answered (the one who wrote the book called The Spectacular Vernacular).
It's become such common vernacular that Merriam-Webster began recognizing it as a verb in 2006.
Like Mr. A, the Question spoke in a stilted, didactic vernacular akin to a philosophical tract's.
The other, less particular attribute today was the nice mix of clues from different vernacular eras.
The narrative, mostly in the third person common to storytelling, is dotted with much contemporary vernacular.
And so the tram slipped into the vernacular of death long cultivated by the city's residents.
You're your own culture as a duo, so you naturally develop your own rituals and vernacular.
Luther established his own musical currency in the form of chorales, those hymns in the vernacular.
But then I realized that his use of raw vernacular among African-Americans was rather unprecedented.
Mr. Matura seldom strayed in his work from the rich singsong vernacular of Trinidad and Tobago.
Nowadays with higher populations, higher density and less land, this vernacular cannot be applied 100 percent.
Instead, he limits himself to proving that black vernacular fits within an already established linguistic paradigm.
The president has even imported gangster vernacular like "rat" and "slime ball" into the Oval Office.
Back then, the city might have been dry (thanks to prohibition), but its vernacular was quite fluid.
It is surprising that the investors in these firms never asked the question about using the vernacular.
Spread, often, by untutored preachers using vernacular storytelling, this was an insurgent faith suited to the frontier.
And Bill Clinton's dalliances are very much a part of the typical American male vernacular these days.
In the essay "Black Vernacular: Reading New Media," Syms wonders how "prosthetic memories" function within collective identity.
He comfortably connects the realms of high art and street vernacular and conceptual thought and pragmatic politics.
He then transferred the handwritten vernacular statements onto colorful monochrome light boxes, typically used for commercial advertisement.
" Ellis also pointed out the dangers of this tactic: "This vernacular to sing is what prosecutors use.
For Dyer, the road trip plays a crucial role in this midcentury photographic turn to the vernacular.
They go for the windy over the vernacular, big picture things over more crucial small picture ones.
Observers can spot the ones who've amassed fluency in black vernacular and radical politics through cable television.
Times like this remind me of why certain recipes exist in the modern Puerto Rican culinary vernacular.
I'd try to rephrase those words in ordinary vernacular, but I couldn't seem to articulate their meanings.
We learned some restaurant vernacular, shouting "corner" and "hot!" as we made our way through the workplace.
I thought the vernacular today was pretty gentle (SHADE, BFFS) and my little favorite was R(EAR).
African-American Vernacular English and Spanish-language slang come together outside the bodega or at the park.
Artists would be able to create their own vernacular based on the close study of these works.
This, coupled with the frequent "swallowing" of consonants, can give the Beijing vernacular a punchy, jocular feel.
In the present-day vernacular, people are most humbled by the things that make them look good.
Employing this vernacular in the classroom, they theorized, could boost sagging black academic performance throughout the district.
"I didn't play one snap of outfield," he said Saturday before catching his slip into football vernacular.
Twitter users are offering up their #BestTVLines20153, and they've got a lot to add to your daily vernacular.
Suggestions of smartphones listening in on conversations have become commonplace rumor and "fake news" has entered our vernacular.
In the titular role, the actress cultivated a distinct accent, reminiscent of Jackie Kennedy's famous Mid-Atlantic vernacular.
It cited the same kinds of studies, used the same kinds of graphs, worked in the same vernacular.
Faith in an alternative reality has become the vernacular of everyday conservative activists in places such as Nevada.
That's where something as simple as football — or soccer, in the U.S. vernacular — was seen having an impact.
Vernacular Interior continues at Hales Gallery (547 W 20th St, New York, NY 10011) through July 19, 2019.
"It's a mess," a competitive powerlifter and underground laboratory distributor (or "UGL," in the Reddit vernacular) told Motherboard.
But today the payment type is almost a pointer — in computer science vernacular — to a source of money.
Here are my top three tips to make a difference: Make diversity part of your organization's everyday vernacular.
For a small fee, vernacular newspapers tie up with rural entrepreneurs to distribute in smaller towns and villages.
Is he a vernacular artist, or a craft artist; an outsider artist, or one who is self-taught?
It has been observed that today's conservative movement, to use the old Leninist vernacular, is a "vanguardist" movement.
Republicans clearly came through it no worse off, but the definition of "Benghazi" in the vernacular was changing.
Brutalism is, as the critic Michael J. Lewis has pointed out, the vernacular expression of the welfare state.
The design, as described by AIA, "demonstrates the frugality of the Nova Scotian vernacular in an elegant manner. "
In turn, she taught him about the value of "vernacular" knowledge and the ethical hazards of scientific hubris.
British authorities never attempted this in Egypt, but some Englishmen proposed that vernacular writing might improve literacy rates.
The biggest piece of that for me was finding a voice and vernacular that felt genuine to me.
With friends, there's a vernacular that you use all the time—and I'm not talking about white friends.
Vanilla ice cream and chocolate chip cookies definitely have their merits—hell, they're eternal in our dessert vernacular.
As portrayed by Mr. Felder, America's great vernacular songwriter was a maudlin, embittered old man all his life.
One of these, which Alter finds endearing, is a loose, vernacular rendition titled "The Message," by the Rev.
Mr. Oliver's interest in vernacular architecture sprang from the same impulses that fueled his passion for the blues.
Using Mr. Lathrop's vernacular, my optic flow was perfectly aligned with my stimulus signal: so, no motion sickness.
" This passage was followed with Gertrude Stein -inspired repetitions, Hnath's vernacular poetry: "There are universes where you're President.
Posters of classic movies, modified for Welsh vernacular—"Dial 'M' for Merthyr"—hang over the cozy window booths.
Yet the late '60s also saw a more restless, troubled vernacular arise among Magnum's members, especially the Americans.
"I think mooning is one of those terms I'd like to remove from the general vernacular," he says.
He comes from a long line of miners and speaks with the earthy, rough vernacular of his milieu.
"I don't think that writing in a sort of breezy, vernacular, colloquial way is so unusual," she said.
That is because John Woolf, hired to design the club in 1968, had a vernacular all his own.
Written in shorthand and vernacular, this single book-length poem subversively brings nature imagery into an anti-nature poem.
Not to get too pseudo-intellectual on you with the etymology, but obviously, the current vernacular developed over time.
The decision to write these books in vernacular, not Latin, was controversial, since that meant anyone could read them.
Human workers, or "associates" in company vernacular, man stations at gaps in the fence that surrounds this "robot field".
They bring in a minister, and she starts cursing at him in the vernacular, and he is completely terrified.
"Eyes on the street" and "social capital," terms she coined, are now a central part of urban-planning vernacular.
In stark contrast to the western world, where print media is in a downturn, vernacular newspapers remain extremely popular.
It's since been softened and incorporated in the fandom vernacular to describe a particularly devoted fan of an artist.
Consequently, many absorb the vernacular and teachings of modern Christianity, but miss out on the advantages of church itself.
Lin-Manuel Miranda sees hip-hop as the music of the American Revolution — the vernacular of the founding fathers.
He also gently chides his fellow-linguists for their inability to present convincing arguments in favor of vernacular language.
Yet they still allude to the vernacular of her Haitian culture, delving into human relationships, urbanism, and environmental issues.
That may fade in the future, as the film takes its place in the canon of American vernacular art.
"I wanted to reinvent the visual vernacular of the game, with an eye toward clarity and playability," says Trachtenberg.
And one of the forms that oppression takes is linguistic prejudice, or prejudice against people who speak vernacular English.
She traveled extensively, visiting the ruins of Iran's previous empires and collecting vernacular illustrative artworks known as coffeehouse paintings.
Swarna Chitrakar, the only vernacular artist among the Anglophones, hails from an area not far from the air base.
When I tried to talk to them using the urban vernacular that I was used to, it fell flat.
Ronstadt's work, and her words in this film, testify to the multicultural, cross-pollinating vitality of American vernacular music.
But its origins are in African-American vernacular, where it referred to a broad awareness of anti-black oppression.
Mr. Trump's vernacular may be an unholy tangle of lies, misapprehensions, disinformation and personal insults, but it exposed Mrs.
First, there's the handsomeness of the language itself, the way he insists that black vernacular is its own grammar.
His paintings speak to millennial audiences in their accessible visual vernacular— they are exciting and Instagrammable, but also unexpected.
They've been in use for hundreds of years and are a part of the vernacular stretching back over generations.
The language changed from Latin to the vernacular, priests faced the people and popular music was welcomed into Mass.
Borrowing the tabloid vernacular of his subject, he paints with broad, vivid brush-strokes, breezily blending historical fact with fiction.
A brand reaches its apotheosis when it slips into the vernacular as a generic noun—Band-Aid, Kleenex, even Dumpster.
His techniques are not just wrestling, but more of what we would refer to, in today's vernacular, as self-defense.
This has given rise to a whole new vernacular when it comes to stating dowry demands without explicitly stating them.
We write for an audience we think we know, in a vernacular they'll understand, using reference points they're familiar with.
"If the vernacular in film is superhero movies and they're great movies, then I guess why not, right?" she said.
LONDON — Bridget Jones is the hapless, chain-smoking singleton who made granny pants sexy, and introduced "fuckwits" into our vernacular.
Culture was something people could use, that blossomed from their vernacular and could make them at home in their lives.
The works demonstrate how artists in Peru melded a popular vernacular and political subject matter with an international Pop aesthetic.
"If anyone ... made the term 'customer satisfaction' a part of the vernacular of America, it was J.D. Power," Effler says.
Pornography is illegal, but China's young find ways to watch it nonetheless, with an online vernacular growing around its availability.
That poem, written in the vernacular in the fourteenth century, is still at the heart of national identity in Italy.
Time and again Mr. Trump has shown contempt for those he perceives as weak and vulnerable — "losers," in his vernacular.
While military slang can be fun, it's even more fun when it seeps into the common vernacular of everyday people.
Working against Jackson is the notion that the speed of social media and its sometimes-inscrutable vernacular suit the young.
I had some notion that folklore would give me a point of entry into wrapping my head around vernacular culture.
Other work of Texas Isaiah's is deeply immersed in the vernacular of street photography, shot largely in black and white.
There are three vernacular entries today — two of them debuts — that are bound to get a reaction from many solvers.
While the vernacular creativity of the hashtag campaign is undeniable, contemporary visual artists adding to the mix is especially powerful.
Rivera's work was closely linked with Johnson's at a time when the term "transgender" had not yet entered the vernacular.
The mix of classicism and vernacular motion is so smooth here, so casual and so classy that it's almost dull.
In an age of exhausted hyperbolic vernacular, it's hard to emphasize the genuinely unprecedented moment our Republic finds itself in.
And maybe decide if there will be "puh-KAHN" or "PEE-can" pie for dessert, depending on the local vernacular.
Imagine the opinions of Jordan B. Peterson, as expressed by Ayn Rand's Superman, in the playful vernacular of Donald Barthelme.
It was only a matter of time before a hair-triggered guy took this vernacular to the national political stage.
As a multi-faceted self-taught artist, Butch Anthony creates works that investigate and appropriate images from the American vernacular.
Three theme answers, check; some interesting cultural touchpoints, check; a dip into modern vernacular (by way of two debuts), check.
They acted as midwives, corpse washers, and professional mourners; they advised on herbalism … and were central officers at vernacular assemblies.
Known for her meticulous, obsessive rendering of interiors, Suss's style references American vernacular art, with its focus on patterned detail.
Other works that highlight the Singaporean vernacular sometimes do so with an exaggerated wink, which smacks of insecurity to me.
The majority of medieval manuscripts are written in Latin, but the era saw the emergence of vernacular English in text.
Coming off a brutal 21.04, high-yield bonds — junk, in the market vernacular — have started the new year with a bang.
It is, in many ways, an old-fashioned play: naturalistic, tightly structured and filled with self-defining monologues of vernacular lyricism.
With Maresca, Ricco has co-authored books showcasing the work of self-taught art-makers and assorted "vernacular" art forms, too.
It revelled in the bureaucracy of the drugs business—one kingpin attends economics night classes—and the vernacular of its tradesmen.
Obama brushed aside the insult, saying he understood Duterte, who has a reputation for vulgarity, was demonstrating his well-established vernacular.
Philippines' Duterte on foreign troops: 'I want them out' Duterte's vernacular has grabbed global headlines for its lack of, well, decorum.
These vernacular images, and their implied circulation across people and time, unsettle what is otherwise depicted as a still, insular space.
Protestants wanted worshippers to have a personal relationship with God and to read the Bible in the vernacular, rather than Latin.
Here's Joanna Krupa declaring her allegiance to Poland's #1 UFC star, Joanna Jedrzejczyk ... and using some questionable vernacular along the way.
It will also have "a more faithful adherence to the local vernacular" than Poundbury, says Ben Murphy, the Duchy's estate director.
The look has been iconified by the likes of Jane Fonda, and even SpongeBob — it's that ingrained in our visual vernacular.
It's not easy to win over Parisians, but diners have been seduced by how these émigrés have mastered the local vernacular.
But there's another staple dish in the New England culinary vernacular that's not all that bad: corned beef and boiled cabbage.
" Switching to Trump's reality television vernacular, he added, "The Bachelorette never picks the person you think has it in the bag!
Take Daniel M. Oppenheimer's wryly titled article Consequences of Erudite Vernacular Utilized Irrespective of Necessity: Problems With Using Long Words Needlessly.
Germane Barnes, a black architecture professor at the University of Miami, has traveled the country studying its role within black vernacular.
But Barbara Levine and Paige Ramey of Project B, a group "dedicated to collecting and preserving vintage vernacular photography," are trying.
"The intimate moments in these photos — that, I think is lacking from the vernacular around the Black Panther movement," she said.
Much of the queens' vernacular, body language and movements come from the drag world's — especially white queens' — interpretation of black femininity.
Le Guin's vernacular, I'd soon discover, was saltier than might be anticipated from an 84-year-old with a pixie cut.
Yet he has carved a voice that is uniquely Australian, finding poetry and an austere beauty in local vernacular and landscape.
Her hit songs, most of them in Egypt's distinctive vernacular Arabic, have been part of the country's entertainment scene for decades.
" She expressed an interest in broadening its audience and exploring lesser-known corners of drawing, especially its "connectivity to vernacular culture.
It literally taught an entry-level standard in game vernacular: how to use an analog stick to control a 3D character.
The Luther Bible became the fulcrum of the Reformation and did for vernacular German roughly what Dante had done for Italian.
I was living with my good friend Alex J. Blenkinsop, an Englishman whose vernacular quickly wormed its way into my heart.
Early-stage investors, known in Silicon Valley vernacular as seed and angel investors, often act as farm teams do in sports.
Mr. Decker describes Mockbee's initial strategy as a kind of top-down, "creative abduction and aestheticized version" of Southern vernacular design.
Does the musical vernacular you work in — old-time, Americana, whatever you'd call it — ever feel restrictive or limiting to you?
He referenced Postmodernism, Japanese pagodas, Art Deco, Dutch gables, and other vernacular and modernist styles for a global fusion of architecture.
Kendall championed the revival of chokers, while Kim pioneered lampshading into everyday vernacular, and Khloé amassed a vast collection of furry slides.
The above lament, often seen without an accompanying image, brings us to the phrases and words the show added to the vernacular.
She craved stories that felt real and complicated and familiar, and she wanted them in the lyrical vernacular of poor black Americans.
It is impossible to read the book and not notice Hollis's frequent use of African American Vernacular English, beginning with the title.
" The two women signify to each other in a black vernacular and throw shade back and forth while singing "Scandalize My Name.
It felt perfectly natural that Hamlet or Richard III should switch to an audience's vernacular in order to communicate privately with them.
Regalado tells me that growing up in the Marcy Projects in Brooklyn, the N-word was a part of her everyday vernacular.
Haddish and Romany Malco, who plays a classic hotep named Jaylen, are the only characters who consistently make use of Black vernacular.
She also apparently made a mean mayonnaise cake, an example of the Midwest vernacular gastronomy that made my coastal-elite stomach queasy.
But the specific storytelling forms and cinematic tricks of reality have more or less become central parts of our current cultural vernacular.
In the weird vernacular of New Orleans, they called it the "poor boy," but it was pronounced "po'boy" and the name stuck.
A vanishing heritage Lumpik House, which is now a bank, and Doherty House are both prime examples of the Afro-Brazilian vernacular.
In the current corporate vernacular of the music industry and startups everywhere, it might be thought of as organic, listener-driven engagement.
The TOILETPAPER agency has become know for combining the vernacular of commercial photography with twisted narrative tableaux of neo-surrealistic shock imagery.
Would a loving supreme being want the truth of religion to be plain even to unlettered people, in the simplest possible vernacular?
Given America's Middle East trials and tribulations since 2003, one would assume "regime change" would have disappeared from the foreign policy vernacular.
"She's created a vernacular of kindness in her public life," her close friend the writer and indie musician Carrie Brownstein told me.
"Rhythmic dynamism" and "affecting vignettes" and "vernacular authenticity" all read like marketing copy for convincing classical nerds that hip-hop is music.
And when people say "well, screw him" or "screw you," it begins to seem not so much vernacular as just plain lazy.
But in the vernacular of the New York City Marathon, the words translate roughly to this: halfway point to a major accomplishment.
Google, for example, faced criticism when a program to pinpoint hate speech online began flagging online comments that included African-American vernacular.
This tradition eventually evolved into the colorful vernacular of hip-hop, a genre that used sonic bricolage as a way to rebel.
Her "when they go low, we go high" line is still part of the political vernacular, and became Clinton's unofficial campaign slogan.
In the absence of wins and the good feelings they engender, troublesome happenings — "distractions," in sports vernacular — tend to percolate and thrive.
It is also assumed that 'sportsprochement' and 'pizzapprochement' will soon enter the regular vernacular of foreign policy analysis and international studies scholarship.
Influences of Brecht-Weill and the British music hall coincide with strong melodies in an American vernacular that aspire toward art song.
At that fraught moment, foreign priests were expelled from Nigeria by the government, and the vernacular liturgy was introduced by the Vatican.
For this series, I used images from a collection of vernacular photographs belonging to Sébastien Lifshitz, who is interested in gender issues.
Von Hess took on the role of the villain, the 'heel' in wrestling vernacular, and portrayed his character of a psychotic Nazi.
"I was trying to use the vernacular of the president-elect's favorite social media platform to encourage him," Shaub explained on Wednesday. .
The lament of the title is now part of the vernacular, and expresses our frustration when faced with useless overabundance of content.
If I'm being honest, REAL TALK (for "If I'm being honest, in modern slang") doesn't seem to fit the vernacular quite right.
Often responding to sociopolitical conditions, the artists in this exhibition project voice and language, and make use of responsive and vernacular materials.
Albers's camera captured extremes of light and shadow and the thickly framed doorways in both pre-Hispanic structures and vernacular adobe dwellings.
Each artist was asked to consider the history of Times Square and its past, which includes vaudeville, dance halls and vernacular forms.
Mr. Sorrentino composes shots as if painting religious art, and "The Young Pope" looks awesome in both the vernacular and spiritual senses.
"Adopting this vernacular and these new concepts is a way to rewrite history and rewrite his 22 years of power," she said.
Today's grid is bathed in 21st-century vernacular and comes with 10 debuts, including a few that provoked visceral responses from me.
The message for his generation of image makers is clear: "I am trying to create a new vernacular — black art as universal."
The message for his generation of image makers is clear: "I am trying to create a new vernacular — black art as universal."
Over the past decade the hashtag changed the way we use social media, launched revolutionary social movements, and bled into IRL vernacular.
Discussing "Improvement (Don Leaves Linda)," by Robert Ashley — who originated a new form of American vernacular opera — with collaborators old and new.
The company's casual-chic aesthetic helped America define its own design vernacular, one that didn't involve copying what was trending in Paris.
"I was trying to use the vernacular of the president-elect's favorite social media platform to encourage him," Shaub explained on Wednesday.
Masnick says they're going to refine the card presentation and reword portions of the rulebook for those not versed in agency vernacular.
Many black politicians adopt a kind of vernacular that has its roots in the church, but McCray paid that tradition very little mind.
If you've reached that milestone, the term "required minimum distribution," or RMD, probably should be part of your vernacular, if it isn't already.
Leaning heavily on the Australian vernacular, Morrison utilized the local word for a person indulging in disgusting behavior to describe the online abusers.
Like GIFGIF, websites like the World Translation Foundation's Emoji Dictionary provide universal definitions for people looking to brush up on their pictorial vernacular.
Actually, Jeff [Daniels] is the one that brought it into our vernacular, as he's had more experience with Aaron and in The Newsroom.
They shake hands, nod heads, and begin speaking in the elliptical but familiar way of people who share the vernacular of a trade.
In the U.S., millions of children grow up speaking African American Vernacular English at home as well as mainstream American English at school.
The SDGs, once the conversation of academics and elites in New York and Geneva, have seeped into everyday vernacular, particularly so amongst Millennials.
His presence as a dancer in the studio has influenced Mr. Ferver to push himself choreographically as he works in the ballet vernacular.
Your average European peasant wasn't literate (plus, Bibles translated into vernacular languages like French, German, or English were rare until the 16th century).
Since then, "wage theft" entered the vernacular and eventually legal terminology, as worker exploitation and economic inequality have become high profile national issues.
The word orange came into the vernacular late, according to Julian Yates, professor of English and material culture studies at University of Delaware.
Combining these two sets basically let them see whether white or black vernacular had a higher or lower chance of being labeled offensive.
Mr. Copping attempted to evolve the brand Mr. de la Renta built for a younger generation while staying within the vernacular he established.
The Australian National Dictionary, a standard guide to the Australian vernacular, added 6,000 words and phrases on Tuesday, its first update since 1988.
The term may not last much longer in the financial vernacular than many of the start-ups that were — wrongly — branded with it.
But Christie also has a fluency in blunt vernacular that can be formidably effective with GOP voters even as it raises liberal hackles.
For Daniel Miller of Santa Monica's Duncan Miller Gallery, it was a deal he couldn't refuse, a vernacular photography buff's dream come true.
Mendoza trained other prizefighters in what was called the Mendoza School or, revealing the vernacular of the time, the Jewish School of prizefighting.
These figures were so deeply embedded into the landscape and geographical vernacular that spending one's time fretting about their presence seemed a waste.
But sometimes that language is a vernacular not of words, but of images: It is photography, or illustration, or graphic design, or typography.
Only much later would he be heralded for his prescient adoption of vernacular subject matter and his sophisticated use of composition and color.
However, the Filipino food vernacular is commonly relegated to those who grew up eating it (and those with Filipinx relatives or close friends).
But the larger takeaway from the day, in terms of the country's popular vernacular, was that Obama should/should not have worn tan.
This unassuming little work implies that an unintentional vernacular surrealism, by means of which the familiar is made strange, fuels D'Alvia's larger project.
And how do designers, dependent on cultivating a certain recognizable vernacular for clients, manage to create an identity without becoming their own cliché?
The home — which was designed by Marc Held, a French architect, with his son Mathias, the homeowner — was inspired by vernacular Corsican architecture.
In democracy there is the reconciliation of opposites, the elevation of the vernacular, the transcendence of the individual through the equality of humanity.
Not all teams took their reports from the bureau, Lakey said, but enough did that the 20 to 80 scale became the vernacular.
The book's pacing is steady and unrelenting, as Goldsmith toggles between his own careful narrative voice and Chuckie's off-the-cuff wiseguy vernacular.
"I felt there was a role for not being too shiny, and having materials connected to a New York vernacular," Mr. Heatherwick said.
Fintech first entered the mainstream vernacular roughly a decade ago, but with every passing year the term gets harder and harder to define.
With #ThanksgivingWithBlackFamilies and all of the hashtag's decorative vernacular, we are given two doorways: an entryway into the universal and the culturally distinct.
The vernacular elements sounded freshest when Mr. Marsalis folded them into passages of symphonic mass, with thick, pungent chords and boldly fractured phrases.
The world does not lack pictures of enchanting young girls, but these are visual poems intensified, rather than denatured, by their vernacular style.
Coyne told Insider she&aposs been on Twitter since she was 12, so she&aposs a native to the vernacular of the platform.
That can mean leaning on ambiguity and trope, using the established vernacular of your genre as a shorthand without giving too much away.
Do you think people are being more careful about using the term "fake news" or is it just firmly embedded in our vernacular?
The two will discuss fifis and what they represent — both "therapeutic devices and vernacular assemblages" — as well as health and sexuality issues in prisons.
And so, from the second it was released, "Dancing On My Own" was subsumed into the musical vernacular of an entire generation of queers.
It's really anarchic, it doesn't take itself seriously at all, and it operates in this really contemporary vernacular which people either love or hate.
So if there's one word that's hard for them to say, or is out of their vernacular, it can bring the whole speech down.
Another is "Found in Translation—Design in California and Mexico: 1915-85", which traces the stylistic exchanges of vernacular architecture between the two regions.
You guys made a point to have AAVE as a clear part of BLACK's vernacular, which is, as is everything, a clearly political choice.
Each layer is physically spaced out, giving the piece the depth of an assemblage box, composed of religious imagery, anatomy diagrams, and vernacular photography.
The characters speak in a contemporary vernacular, but they exchange traditional Russian silverware and dream of a future in which "women will wear trousers".
At times, Korina's boxes resemble vernacular street shrines, adapting the theatrical manner in which nativity scenes are typically staged to depict major cosmological events.
" Guo works with a specifically Chinese visual vernacular, one that incorporates Western elements with postmodern élan in what curator Andrew Bolton calls "auto-Orientalism.
In the 21994s and '19953s, Gingrich developed an obsessive focus on messaging, cultivating a political vernacular aimed at exploiting and stoking mistrust of Washington.
The Funky 4 + 1's 1980 "That's the Joint" is a great example of how hip-hop's particular vernacular helped propel the culture forward.
Even before "transgender" became part of the popular vernacular, Arquette shaped notions of what it was to be gender-nonconforming through their entertainment career.
By producing them, he didn't just create the Reformation; he also created his country's vernacular, as Dante is said to have done with Italian.
The process has come to be known on trading desks as "mark to myth" as opposed to the official vernacular of mark to model.
New words are slipping into the modern vernacular as cultural phenomena shape the way we speak, and outdated words are falling out of use.
Her prose is a strange amalgam of silver-spoon ­educational advantage (although she never attended college) and a diffident vernacular suspicious of fine language.
The vernacular idiom that Hurston valued Wright and others deprecated as backward; her literary concern with romantic love was considered frivolous and even vulgar.
The impeccably delivered one-liners: The inimitable facial expressions: The attempted "dude" vernacular: Classic moments like this: And this: And this: Even more impressive?
We wind the clock back to 2015, when words such as "troll" ruled the vernacular, and take a look at exactly what went down.
One student passes her in the hallway with some black-ish vernacular, "those kicks are lit!" to which she smiles before her straightened face.
Every now and again, an image forces its way out of the endless stream of vernacular, commercial and artistic pictures and freezes our attention.
Jerry Garcia started his career as a bluegrass-obsessed banjo player, and the vernacular of traditional music is built in to the Dead's ethos.
From the 90s piano chords to the vernacular of the 2000s, "Boo'd Up" is the song that transports you to back to high school.
Much of the vibe is curated by the aforementioned announcer Simon, who has his own vernacular shared only with those who frequent Meat Bingo.
Biden appeals to black people partly because of a certain vernacular glint in his eye and partly now because of his connection with Obama.
For the most part, Atget pictured Paris without Parisians, but for Evans, the vernacular of a city could not be separated from its inhabitants.
It seems unlikely that 'beaches' in the ordinary vernacular sense could be restored, given today's tides and currents, so as to afford reasonable safety.
That changed when he read "Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance," Marshall and Jean Stearns's comprehensive book on its African-American origins.
Exchanging commissions on these trades for research — known in the vernacular as soft-dollar arrangements — has been the way of the world for decades.
It manages all this while staying fully situated within a natural black American vernacular spanning distinctions of class and color — a deeply impressive feat.
He respected and followed both fine-art and vernacular traditions, taking the mottled gray backdrop of early studio photography and making it his own.
Indeed, Mr. Messina had given birth to a tool that would infiltrate our vernacular, aggregate conversations and, yes, fill screens with unnecessary, meaningless garble.
"The number of German words that are vernacular enough that they don't pull the viewer out of the story is much smaller," he said.
"Weave," with bright green pigment on a yellow ground has trompe l'oeil "fraying" edges, while "July" mimics the irregular arrangements of vernacular patchwork quilts.
Mr. Schafer, best known for conceiving historically focused houses rooted in classical and vernacular architecture, has created a seaside home that is breezily modern.
Christenberry focused on those aspects of the landscape that evoked vernacular building styles, especially in Hale County, where he spent much of his childhood.
Jonathan Gold, the Pulitzer Prize-winning restaurant critic of the Los Angeles Times, is a champion of the vernacular, and wrote to praise him.
Liberia was the West African nation that introduced to the world the gruesome vernacular of blood diamonds and child soldiers in the early 1990s.
According to Ricky Ubeda, who plays Indio, the Sharks' "vernacular of movement is Afro-Cuban, Afro-Puerto Rican, Latin—it's salsa and street dances."
I was knocked out by her eye for detail, her rigorous use of formal and vernacular languages and the depth of her narrative perspectives.
This is art through this vast vernacular of service …   For years, I've always been sitting in silence — two, three hours, just sitting in silence.
The popular architecture Tumblr McMansion Hell has long been the perfect mix of comedy remixing, internet vernacular, and actually informative educational posts about architecture.
There are internet — you know, the vernacular, trolls — who get this information and harass people who just want to help their fellow citizens vote.
And we just believed that a bespoke common vernacular, common UI, integrating email with messaging, with chat — And people being part of a community.
Words like "pivot" and "acqui-hire" have become just as big a part of the vernacular as explanations of profit that depart from accounting conventions.
But, in all due respect, in today's vernacular it's used as an interpretation of an organization that exists when the environmental costs are too high.
Still on Facebook, I got into an exchange with the poet Daniel Tiffany about whether Gordon's wild vernacular was based more on mimesis or invention.
And the result is a transformation of political discourse and the establishment of a new insidious vernacular — of division, deceit, of victory at all costs.
Duterte's campaign directed a network of volunteers to promote the candidate's authoritarian image; they pushed nicknames like "the Punisher" and "Duterte Harry" into the vernacular.
The dated vernacular of the sea shanties emphasized the gulf between the sea farer (Ader) and those to whom he would later recount his experiences.
Blurring vernacular and art photography, photos of his mother and late aunt from the Canada album are collaged at the edges of the large portraits.
As Harry spoke in the country's vernacular and cracked a few Australian jokes, Meghan watched from the side and rested both hands on her belly.
How can the word "entitlement" even be in the vernacular when the average per-capita income in sub-Saharan Africa is about $800.00 per year?
The Matrix is canon, its themes, style, vernacular, and visual language lodged so permanently in our brains that they're still referenced—and ripped off—today.
The short film, which plays with the themes and vernacular of classic detective and mobster films, does not shy away from a well-executed pun.
He never wavered from putting America first -- or, in campaign vernacular, making America great again -- whether the subject was climate change, trade or North Korea.
Let's face it, David Bowie might have been the world's first transgender ally — before we had words like "transgender" or even "ally" in our vernacular.
"Even if you view the films of Med Hondo and you're going to take a completely different approach, that's part of the vernacular," argues Bodde.
With the Second Vatican Council, the Church accepted the vernacular, and with it modern standards of truth in politics, economics, social science, and the like.
When he came to town for a rally, the numbers were, compared to a usual politician's draw, yuge, to put it in the Trump vernacular.
It's these seemingly contradictory and unusual flavors that make Maroilles and it's kinfolk so appealing, and a critical part of a well-rounded cheese vernacular.
As with other shows in the Public Works series, this "Twelfth Night" shifts from the original text to a modern vernacular in Ms. Taub's songs.
But I think darn few people could look at the most rudimentary, simple, vernacular house and say, 'Those are important and need to be saved.
Before terms like "mass shooting" and "active shooter" entered our common vernacular, one of my classmates stole into our rural middle school in Jonesboro, Ark.
"The next 100 million customers will have to be in the vernacular language," said Kishore Thota, director of customer experience and marketing for Amazon India.
His many books also included "Between the Living and the Dead: Riddles Which Tell Stories" (1980) and "Everyday Life: A Poetics of Vernacular Practices" (2005).
Any of the tailoring or underwear or things that aren't necessarily part of her vernacular she still managed to create something that felt very her.
In this convening of vernacular art, you'll often find the application of found objects and nods to domestic work through the brilliant use of textile.
We want to use vernacular and modern design together to help solve the problems of high-density cities like Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.
If you weren't already thinking about how air travel contributes to your carbon footprint, you probably are now that "flying shame" has entered the vernacular.
That the name of the author of "Gulliver's Travels" persists in popular vernacular — with "Swiftian" defining caustic and accomplished wit — speaks to his lasting influence.
She attributes it to her Illinois vernacular, but I sense a wisdom and calmness in her demeanor that I certainly didn't have at her age.
Though he is frequently on the road — making Eve, in one of the novel's rich vernacular details, a "grass widow" — he disdains Leon at home.
While docs who have trained more recently suggest casual use of cruel medical vernacular has declined, many say the bias it reflects remains devastatingly common.
Many drag slang terms—from "throwing shade" to "yaas"—have become staples of our modern vernacular, to the point that they've even appeared as Jeopardy answers.
In fact, the very title confronts it: "Robbin' Season" is an explicit reference to Atlantan vernacular for the pre-Christmas robbery rush for presents and bonuses.
On set, they came up with this idea, this vernacular — this is embarrassing, I can't really do this without sounding like I'm trying to glorify myself.
Exterior building materials were limited to unfinished redwood and cypress, which helped them further blend in with groves as well as mirror the local vernacular architecture.
The images and art works that make up this exhibition — mostly vernacular and documentary photographs — restore dignity to their subjects by restoring nuance to their stories.
The e-books transcend the concept of simply tinkering with electronics and instead help you build the skills and vernacular to work in the IoT space.
And the show and its crew returned the love, adopting the vernacular of sexual assault advocates; the term "slut shaming" has appeared in SVU scripts repeatedly.
But as "connected car" creeps into the vernacular, an increasing number of car buyers will expect vehicles to be updatable the same way their smartphones are.
Usually accompanied by stan Twitter language, the dramatic fan vernacular of devotion found mainly online, fancam replies look at a post and quickly divert the topic.
SO WE MAY HAVE BEEN IN THE SEVENTH OR EIGHTH INNING, IF YOU WANT TO PUT IT IN THAT VERNACULAR, AND IT'S EXTENDED INTO EXTRA INNINGS.
Like many architects of post-World War II modernity, Mellor considered good design his civic imperative; his generation created a visual vernacular for the postwar age.
As they try on black vernacular language for size, their posts and tweets can read like corporate coolspeak, but motivated by chaos as much as greed.
But when it comes to tolerance in the context of politics, principles and people, perhaps we should consider removing it from our social vernacular altogether.  Why?
We want them to understand the quality, the high quality of the product, the benefits of it, and then to put it in their own vernacular.
I enjoy the tension that happens when you aestheticize something that's not meant to be aestheticized because it's ephemeral, spontaneous, vernacular, or bureaucratic, like these documents.
"It doesn't happen often, but when there's no flares, we set fire to dunny rolls," said Mr. Cobden, 51, using the bush vernacular for toilet paper.
It's the main component of one of the menu's "seasonal bowls"—a term, borrowed from fast-casual vernacular, that Teranga does itself no favors in using.
No allusive echo is merely random in this play, written in a vernacular epic style that brings to mind both Tarell Alvin McCraney and Sam Shepard.
This quilted heritage of cultures and histories gives Toronto its unique immigrant ethos, along with the street vernacular of West Indian patois and African-American English.
Going to A.A. meetings and reading the Big Book is to learn a new vernacular, one that's chock-full of clichéd slogans and coded religious themes.
Built in an ornate early 20th-century Catalan vernacular, it's one of three boxlike homes on a narrow street near the edge of a steep hill.
"I started this series of house portraits with the idea that it would reveal something about the urban vernacular in the 'world's borough,'" Herrin-Ferri stated.
He was a champion of Eastern European novelists like Ivan Klima and Bruno Schulz, and also a passionate student of American history and the American vernacular.
It wasn't until I heard the details for the first time from her lips, in her own vernacular, that I realized, 'Oh, maybe it was true.
THE CURRENT MOMENT of New York-specific vintage comes at the same time that vernacular styles have become part of the aesthetic of many clothing companies.
Questions are as baked into our holiday vernacular as presents, so anticipating them will take the sting out of having to navigate the anxiety at work.
THE CURRENT MOMENT of New York-specific vintage comes at the same time that vernacular styles have become part of the aesthetic of many clothing companies.
But don't skip Italian Village and German Village neighborhoods, where innovators and dreamers have opened destination shops like Stump Plants and Vernacular and bars like Cosecha.
He also jokingly stated a collection was inspired by "tops" and "bottoms" — not the garments, but rather the words denoting sexual preference in the gay vernacular.
The director, auspiciously, is Lila Neugebauer, whose energizing production of Sarah DeLappe's "The Wolves," a vernacular-dense study of a girls' soccer team, was a knockout.
In the vernacular, the phrase "to gaslight" refers to the act of undermining another person's reality by denying facts, the environment around them, or their feelings.
It's the most widely respected news network in the world, our viewers tell us, and we really don't want profane vernacular coming out of our anchors' mouths.
Hacks are nearly becoming every day vernacular, Edward Snowden is now a movie star and the upcoming general election continues to look more unhinged by the day.
In Ingvar Kamprad's passing, let's try to expand our vernacular to encompass more startups, and celebrate the kind of original thinking that has completely reshaped our world.
Michael C. McMillen combined the languages of vernacular architecture, retro-futurism, sci-fi whimsy, and a healthy dose of dystopia — all the rage nowadays — in this show.
In a recent meeting in London, KRG foreign minister Falah Mustafa repeatedly stated that he was part of an Iraqi delegation -- a rarity in his previous vernacular.
The wealth of early vernacular literature and scholarship is one reason Icelandic is preserved in its ancient form, with a complex grammar other Scandinavian languages have lost.
"This suggests that the word 'patience' will be in the Feds vernacular for some time," said Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto.
Beyond official histories, written by the "winners" and pivoting around major world events, human history is driven and propelled by everyday stories, regular people, and vernacular objects.
A space that focuses on future-bent contemporary art and regional folk vernacular, the gallery is the perfect blend of smart, cheekily self-aware, and local af.
Thinking outside the box to find the perfect name which embodies her bad attitude, teenage vernacular, and vixen vibe of her soon-to-exist dream Internet store.
The me-first charlatanism of 2018 portends, I told him, a new manner of post-scam American value that was creeping into our national vernacular: the finesse.
" In the Times, Peckham said that Urban Dictionary is important because it shows how online vernacular evolves—it "allows us to see that process in real time.
It makes for a much more implausible narrative arena than cyberspace, the threads of which were already fast spooling together while Neuromancer was granting them a vernacular.
Roth achieved this new sincerity without giving up the comedic gifts—the skill writing in the vernacular and talent for grotesque exaggeration—that came with Portnoy's Complaint.
I couldn't shake my rural regional vernacular, like using "them" in the demonstrative form, and I couldn't relate to most of my middle class, Lululemon-clad classmates.
Though the hamfisted comedy about a future full of low IQ morons bombed at the box office, it's become a cult favorite, even slipping into the vernacular.
For "Lincoln," he spent months researching Lincoln's political and personal life and before shooting began he was texting his screen wife, Sally Field, in 19th century vernacular.
The results, with their mix of academic painting and vernacular craft, carve out a space for work that asserts a black identity within the art historical continuum.
So she considers her deep dive into the summer camp vernacular a joyful escape from the compulsion to smooth away rough edges — a chance to embrace imperfection.
The screen paintings, set into windows, are vernacular works of art that showcase both place and creative vision, reminding of the inherent creative value in functional objects.
From a modern standpoint it's a bit silly, but you can't blame the early emailers for not anticipating how it would be incorporated into the modern vernacular.
Later, working on her own, Bo Bardi made starker and chunkier furniture for her own buildings, often inspired by the vernacular architecture of her beloved northern Brazil.
RUMSEY TAYLOR The narrative of the opioid crisis has a familiar visual vernacular: track-covered arms, empty syringes, the translucent amber cylinder of an empty pill container.
It's likely that African slaves merged the vernacular structures of their native languages with English vocabulary, or in some cases imported new words outright, as with okay.
Many liberal analysts have interpreted the president's wandering speech patterns as a sign of dementia or stupidity, or even as some sort of folksy, working-class vernacular.
Evans's 1929 photograph of the Brooklyn Bridge depicts a black monolith from a low angle, emphasizing form and light rather than some vernacular truth about the structure.
Indeed, though the latter did not create the style of the maison he took on in 1983, he has worked within its vernacular for over 30 years.
Out of Reid's often cloying vernacular, then, emerge some surprisingly resonant insights into the casual racism in everyday life, especially in the America of the liberal elite.
He has told friends and associates, using his trademark military vernacular, that he understands he cannot throw bombs every day and needs to pick his battles carefully.
His grandmother was part of a tradition that the gallerist Jeffrey Deitch, discussing Scott's influences, calls "the American vernacular"—and that other people might call being crafty.
Through Molly, a lawyer who brilliantly code-switches between corporate and colloquial vernacular, the show explores how class mobility often differs for African-American women and men.
He soon became known for his prowess at making identifications—"idents," in the Scotland Yard vernacular—and last year he was asked to join the super-recognizers.
Real estate in these parts would probably cost you a thumb, yet the houses are unfussy hip-roofed bungalows built in a kind of army-base vernacular.
Maybe they're just minimalist, or perhaps "vernacular," a term once used to describe the eternally "under construction" nature of the web in the mid- to late '90s.
It trades in the vernacular of internet-saturated life, its modus operandi, and the mundane sights we witness while online or staring; working at our computer screens.
In another magnetic canvas, In the Nick of Time, a frenzy of elements like color splatter, female energy, and comic book vernacular collide intensely on the canvas.
In this vernacular, the post-mobile era is not like the post-PC era, where the smartphone displaced the PC as the primary computer for the masses.
When Martin Luther made his break from Catholicism in the 16th century, hymns emerged as one of the means through which the new vernacular worship could be practised.
He was the first to translate the Bible into an East Slavic vernacular—until then, the Orthodox Church had disseminated information in Church Slavonic, an arcane liturgical language.
The work's debt to Beckett is forthright, but it translates the bleak comedy of that Irish master into an exuberant American vernacular that even has room for optimism.
Their findings suggest that some black children learn science quicker when they interact with a virtual peer using African-American vernacular than one speaking with a standard dialect.
The voice-activated smart home device is set to launch in the country on Thursday, shipping with a distinctly Australian twang and an understanding of the local vernacular.
But he did not boast, like one of his successors, that "Der Euro spricht deutsch" – the euro speaks German, or "My way or highway," in New York vernacular.
It was the novel where he started talking in the vernacular, using slang and swear-words in run-on sentences that had the jauntiness of dorm-room talk.
"By listening to all the early folk artists and singing the songs yourself, you pick up the vernacular," Dylan says, before launching into rambling mode: You internalize it.
A space that focuses on future-bent contemporary art and regional folk vernacular, the gallery is the perfect blend of smart, cheekily self-aware, and is local af.
In China, political movements in the nineteen-tens and twenties helped end the practice of using classical Chinese, replacing it with the northern vernacular now known as Mandarin.
The moniker "March Madness" became part of pop vernacular in the mid-1980s, stemming from the David-versus-Goliath upsets that always shock players, coaches, fans and bookmakers.
The vernacular images suggest the material comforts of home, and the housing insecurity created first by discriminatory home loan practices, and later, unchecked gentrification throughout the Bay Area.
All that was needed was somebody to adopt a new vernacular, say to heck with all that, and promise to stop "unlimited illegal immigration" and restore American greatness.
"My main concern about the digital turn in vernacular photography has to do with the difficulty of preserving and archiving these images for future generations," said Ms. Fineman.
Jin Yong used martial arts fiction as a vehicle to talk about Chinese history and traditional culture, forging his own fictional vernacular that drew heavily on classical expressions.
It helps, of course, to see "Disco Pigs" more than once to fully understand its dense, vernacular poetry, which abounds in thickly Gaelic neologisms and more classic obscenities.
But do we -- do we like it if, to use the vernacular, somebody is talking, their book, particularly if they're active in the market and aren't disclosing it?
Like Ansari, many of India's TikTok stars live in small towns or villages, have either never made it to college or dropped out, and speak their vernacular language.
"The book's pacing is steady and unrelenting, as Goldsmith toggles between his own careful narrative voice and Chuckie's off-the-cuff wiseguy vernacular," our critic Jennifer Szalai writes.
But even as it properly foregrounds Wilson's dialogue — few playwrights have approached his genius for turning workaday vernacular into poetry — "Fences" is much more than a filmed reading.
His score for piano and electronics accompanies the piece, in which Mr. Teicher is joined by six dancers to investigate vernacular jazz, tap dance and the Lindy Hop.
The vernacular of the modern is so familiar that I suspect the majority of visitors who have been to the museum before will wonder what, precisely, is different.
All of which heightens the possibility that the two-year clock may expire without a deal, a scenario known in Brexit vernacular as going over the cliff edge.
No matter what I'm doing, I like to feel like I haven't done it before — that it's expanding my vernacular, that I'm a student of the medium again.
But I still think its point was clear: The phrase 'locker room talk' became a pejorative in the American vernacular as soon as the Trump tape exposed it.
Byam was a deft craftsman in the tradition of American vernacular woodcarving, and his roughly hewn art is haunted by 20th-century culture, both its wars and fantasies.
But over time, it is experienced as a pleasantly familiar phrase in a kind of urban vernacular, as though the city were murmuring encouragement to be on foot.
Each features bits of gray fabric with white polka dots — "vernacular," again — as a dominant element, around which hover rectangular glyphs collaged or stenciled in Fujita's unfancy palette.
"They moved the focus from individuals who are patricians to jihadis who speak the street language, the vernacular," says Brian Michael Jenkins, a terrorism expert at the Rand Corporation.
While the term "Hamilton elector" has become part of the vernacular this election cycle, it is clear many electors consider Hamilton's original conceptualization when looking to fulfill their duties.
His Jewish accented vernacular speech is sounded out as musical tones, rough edges made exquisite in the alchemy of his poetry, which spins base materials into precariously shimmering fabrics.
While their embrace of vernacular culture distinguished the Hairy Who artists from New York's disaffected Pop artists, it wasn't just popular culture that influenced the Hairy Who's visual vocabulary.
On December 10 and 11, The Editorial, a critical editorial platform organized in collaboration with Asia Art Archive in Hong Kong and Vernacular Institute, will take place at TFAM.
Personally, I got into them by listening to The Read, a show on which two black hosts discuss hip-hop and popular culture using irreverent banter and black vernacular.
With harsh shadows, dramatically canted shots, and riveting camerawork that puts the audience into the drag-down fight to survive, Romero coined a new filmic vernacular for raw fear.
Many people have never heard of the "alt-left," but "alt-right" is a term that's found its way into popular culture and the vernacular of politicians and journalists.
After Drake included the phrase in his song "The Motto" in 2011, YOLO became part of the public zeitgeist, cropping up on social media, in vernacular, and on products.
That women — embodying 19th-century mores while speaking in a 21st-century vernacular — are portraying men here weaves this point of view into the very fabric of the performance.
That defeatist stand sounds like the countries that, in Trump's vernacular, are "ripping us off" should be doing the country a favor by buying more American goods and services.
For a better look at how we can all commit to updating menstrual vernacular and closing the period poverty gap, we sat down with three wildly inspiring female activists.
The phrase "Get 'em out" has replaced "You're fired" in Mr. Trump's vernacular, offering him an air of iron-fisted authority to buttress the image of toughness he projects.
The energy shifted partly to the Catskills, where entertainers spritzed Yiddish vernacular into their English-language routines for vacationers who wanted a side of nostalgia with their stuffed cabbage.
While he eats in and writes about high-end restaurants and ambitious, would-be celebrity chefs, his heart is in the vernacular gastronomy of immigrant and working-class neighborhoods.
"The vernacular is to sing," Ellis commented in May on one of Mueller's possible that perhaps investigators wanted Manafort to change his plea to guilty and agree to cooperate.
He cites the parallels between the Latin Mass and the traditions of his Igbo tribe and views claims that the vernacular Mass can be more easily "inculturated" as misleading.
Collaborating with the late gallerist Colin De Land, Prince used the name Dogg for a body of work in the 1980s that exalts the vernacular of American car culture.
Runyon, who died in 1946, made up quite a bit of his flowery vernacular, and his prose can now be as opaque as the language of a lost tribe.
The vernacular of outer space is not principally one of places, but of images viewed from a place, and hung in the deceivingly intimate gallery of the night sky.
His New York space is currently presenting the exhibition "Scrapbook Love Story: Memory and the Vernacular Photo Album," focusing on albums and scrapbooks from the 300s to the 250s.
The Harlem dancers are too stiff to pull off true casual cool, so the vernacular side looks amateur, a break from dancing rather than a mode equal to ballet.
Around the same time, Zhor Rehihil, the Muslim director of El Mellah, started a weekly radio show about Jewish culture featuring Jews speaking in the Moroccan Arab vernacular, darija.
The decline of vernacular architecture in the face of global urbanization is, of course, hardly new, though traditional Korean hanok are a particularly stark contrast to modern city living.

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