cant+language

  • 51flash language — Australian Slang (obsolete) cant or jargon of thieves …

    English dialects glossary

  • 52sea language — noun : sailors cant …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 53Padonkaffsky jargon — used in graffiti in the city park of Aalst, Belgium. Padonkaffsky jargon or Olbanian language is a cant language developed by padonki of Runet. It started as an Internet slang language originally used in the Russian Internet community. It became… …

    Wikipedia

  • 54Parfact — Infobox Language game nativename = Tcafrap states = United Kingdom region = Worcestershire hostlanguage = English, etc. Parfact is an example of a cryptolect originating from the Worcestershire area of the UK. Similar to the use of Cant (a secret …

    Wikipedia

  • 55Verlan — In the French language, verlan is the inversion of syllables in a word which is found in slang and youth language. It rests on a long French tradition of transposing syllables of individual words to create slang words.fact|date=August 2008 The… …

    Wikipedia

  • 56Argot — (French, Spanish and Catalan for slang ) is a secret language used by various groups including, but not limited to, thieves and other criminals to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations. Victor Hugo was one of the first to… …

    Wikipedia

  • 57Fenya — Fenya, феня, or Fenka is a Russian cant language used among criminals. Originally it was a cryptolanguage of ofenyas or ofenes , old Russian peddlers, and had a number of names. There are no convincing explanations about the origins of the words… …

    Wikipedia

  • 58Bargoens — is a form of Dutch slang. More specifically, it is a cant language that arose in the 17th century, and was used by criminals, tramps and travelling salesmen as a secret code, like Spain s Germanía or French Argot . However, the word Bargoens… …

    Wikipedia

  • 59Back slang — is an English coded language in which the written word is spoken phonetically backwards. It is thought to have originated in Victorian England, being used mainly by market sellers, such as butchers and greengrocers, to have private conversations… …

    Wikipedia

  • 60Jargon — Jar gon, n. [F. jargon, OF. also gargon, perh. akin to E. garrulous, or gargle.] 1. Confused, unintelligible language; gibberish. A barbarous jargon. Macaulay. All jargon of the schools. Prior. [1913 Webster] 2. Hence: an artificial idiom or… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English