Lexicon in a sentence as a noun

And vulgarity has it's honored place in the lexicon.

Petrichor is one of the great neologisms of the English lexicon.

> an askCan this new idiom be stricken from our collective lexicon?

One small healthy sign is that the terms "rent-seeking" and "financialization" seem now to have entered the lexicon.

It is insane that "car payment" is part of our lexicon, especially for someone claiming to have money problems.

It is steadily diffused into the day to day lexicon so thoroughly that it passes beyond cliche into mere nothingness.

Can we purge the word "fanboy" from our collective lexicon?I don't think I've seen a single discussion enriched by its use. It's just a catch-all insult, like the "fag" of the twenty-first-century tech scene.

" We'd guess there's probably another word for it, somewhere outside of the economist's lexicon.

Because the accepted lexicon of 'bright' is associated with a tingling, slightly painful feeling in the eyes.

"Fail" as a noun is a widespread internet meme, that has shown enough longevity to potentially enter the lexicon permanently.

Did you customise your lexicon at all for this genre?Also, in my experience, it's not the lexicon of words -- heck, SentiWordNet has existed for long enough -- it's what you do with that input signal that counts.

They teach languages in a way that's similar to how a toddler learns to speak - by going from sounds to words, and by gradually expanding your lexicon while jogging your memory on previously learned words and phrases.

The word ********* itself was brought into the English lexicon for the lobbying effort in order to leverage anti-Mexican racism in painting cannabis as a dangerous drug.

Lexicon definitions

noun

a language user's knowledge of words

See also: vocabulary

noun

a reference book containing an alphabetical list of words with information about them

See also: dictionary