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The term has gone beyond show business, however, and has joined the general slanguage in the sense of "one's particular thing."
The program for "Slanguage" includes an educational and laughter-inducing glossary.
Why bother, when I'm right here at onlanguage@nytimes.com, and the query is about one of the most multi-meaninged words in the slanguage?
With this "slanguage", he approaches topics including racism, the environment, technology and religion often from unexpected angles.
The old pumped has lost its zip; stoked, from the poking of a fire, is a dying ember in slanguage.
TV Series, used part of Variety's slanguage.
Others, like Slanguage in Los Angeles, have established self-sustaining, artist-run workshops and exhibition spaces.
It's not dominating the pop charts anymore, and neither is it irrigating the mainstream with new beats, styles, and slanguage.
The Boston Herald, said of Slanguage that it "crackles with passion and street-smart humor.
Another collaborative album with Awol One, Slanguage, was released on Mush Records in 2003.
Beertown - Variety slanguage for Milwaukee; "Beertown is the final stop on the current 'Show Boat' tour."
His New Jersey guide, which solicits contributions on his "Slanguage" web site (http://www.slanguage.com/jersey.html), presents a translation problem because the state has three distinct accents.
These droll definitions come from Lanham's opening glossary, which lays out the hipster slanguage in which the rest of the book is written ("tassel - girl").
Testone performs solo and with several Charleston groups, including The Freeloaders, James Brown Dance Party, and Slanguage.
His programs include: "Spikerzy z licensją do nauczania", "Chatter Box", "Therapidiom", "Slanguage" i "Bobby the Snail".
The company's work transitioned from a revue format to fully fledged theatrical pieces under the direction of Jo Bonney at the New York Theatre Workshop, where they presented their first major show, Slanguage in 2001.
For much of its existence, Varietys writers and columnists have used a jargon called slanguage or varietyese (a form of headlinese) that refers especially to the movie industry, and has largely been adopted and imitated by other writers in the industry.
In 1985, a Times editorial writer (always anonymous but it was Jack Rosenthal, with slanguage help from his son, John), in an editorial headed "The Dictionary of Dumb," did a riff on airhead, then a teenage term being bruited about in derogation of female politicians.
Their slanguage between themselves- "D.B." meaning dead body, "a probable 10-56" for a case of apparent suicide-pinned down the certainty of death with words, and the crackle of messages issuing from the transceiver clipped to one of their utility belts was the eerie voice of fate, unintelligible but unignorable.
This raises in my mind bonzer [ bonza, bonser , or bonsa ] which first makes its appearance with the gloss that bulwark of Austral Slanguage, or its synonyms boshter and bosker , all three of which are first recorded in 1903 or 1904.
Anyone who habitually enfolds New York in a loving embrace - not just its Gold Coast and its midwinter galas but its pockets of poverty and its packed and pounding subways in midsummer rush hours - is likely to warm to the exuberant, insightful entertainment titled "Slanguage."
In 1974 he was the founding editor of Verbatim, a respected quarterly newsletter on language that melded academic treatments of linguistic topics ("Southern Amerind Lexical Contributions") and more amused and amusing stories with titles like "Ooglification in American English Slang" and "Prep School Slanguage."