Vernacular in a sentence as a noun

Like it or not, it's been vernacular for quite some time.

", but that's not, like, the only use of "like" in American vernacular.

"*****" is vernacular, but that doesn't mean the FBI uses the word when they announce they've cracked a prostitution ring.

In the US "what we pay them to do" is vernacular for "it's their assigned job" or "it's what we asked them to do".

For centuries, Jews even spoke a language other than the vernacular.

Vernacular in a sentence as an adjective

To use the vernacular, this story doesn't 'scan'.The comment "Its an open source encrypted, private alternative to other services such as Facebook chat.

Writing a DSL that is dissimilar to both the underlying language and the domain vernacular is obviously horrible.

What's particularly sad is how the vernacular architectural features, which have evolved over thousands of years to deal with these issues, have been largely abandoned over the 20th century.

Can't wait for the announcement about the Harlem data center written in african american vernacular and the one about the Shanghai data center, with the hilarious misspellings swapping Ls and Rs.

Vernacular definitions

noun

a characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves); "they don't speak our lingo"

See also: slang cant jargon lingo argot patois

noun

the everyday speech of the people (as distinguished from literary language)

adjective

being or characteristic of or appropriate to everyday language; "common parlance"; "a vernacular term"; "vernacular speakers"; "the vulgar tongue of the masses"; "the technical and vulgar names for an animal species"

See also: common vulgar