Idiolect in a sentence as a noun

Whether mistake or habit, or language, dialect, or idiolect, what matters is the part that comes after.

Parent's problem problem is that they assume anything different from their idiolect is stupid and wrong.

As a native speaker, I'm going to push back on the nuance you suggest, and say that that distinction certainly does not exist in my idiolect.

That's part of why I've decided, for my own idiolect, to use Eastasia and Oceania, respectively.

But getting people who want to argue about "correct English" to an understanding of idiolects is more work than I can put into a comment during a work day.

And if you figure out their idiolect it is the single most informative car show about cars I will likely never be able to afford I have ever seen.

Once you become familiar with a person idiolect text is actually better for discovering the nuances in their emotion.

The second person plural in my parents' idiolect of English is "you", but in mine there's effectively a familiar/formal dichotomy of "you guys" and "you", with the latter rarely used.

In most hackers' idiolect, the term "string" refers to an implementation-dependent representation of characters.

Maven has its own idiolect and documentation is only in the form of cryptic parameter descriptionsIf they just right some apporachable documentation, it would be so much better.

In compliance with my "educate, don't ridicule" rule:"In linguistics, an idiolect is a variety of language that is unique to a person, as manifested by the patterns of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation that he or she uses.

Each of us constructs an idiolect for our use, and the semantic edifice wrapping our words which we use to exercise thought often bears signs of the issues we have dealt with, not necessarily in learning the language, but also building it for our individual purposes.

" The fact that some prescriptivist decided not to include the singular "they" in his or her artificial dialect of standardized English doesn't make the singular "they" any more "wrong" in my idiolect of English than the existence of the RnRS standard would make other dialects of Scheme like Racket "wrong," regardless of how one defines "wrong" as long as its definition is held constant.

In my idiolect, changing the gender of pronouns inside of idioms is highly marked, even though I use singular "they" as the epicene pronoun.> The classic phrase was ... strangely genderedI don't think it was "strangely" gendered; despite recent growth in the corpus frequency of singular "they", many formal manuals of style still prohibit its usage, preferring "one" as the epicene pronoun.

Idiolect definitions

noun

the language or speech of one individual at a particular period in life