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Language

1. A large set of words.
2. A word used by BadBoyHalo when someone swears or says a slur.
1. John: I know 3 languages, English, Polish, and French.
Jay: Wow!
2. Someone: F**K OFF YOU LITTLE B****
BadBoyHalo: LANGUAGE!
by B to the E to the N October 9, 2024
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Language barriers

A profound point THAT I MADE BECAUSE I'M SMARTER THAN YOU.
Hym "Yeah, you're fucking garbage people. I made the point about the language barriers. Not her. She has to steal it for me because she's worse."
by Hym Iam March 23, 2024
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Langage

No, not language, langage. Langage is a similar word and means language in French. It is a method of expressing emotion. There are many langages: Love langage, Apology langage, Anger langage, Sympathy langage, etc. Langage is more focussed on how you express emotions rather than how you communicate simple tasks.
Lexie- "What's your love langage?"
Ria- "My love langage is physical touch, meaning I show how I care through hugs, sitting close to someone, etc."
Mcqueen- "My love langage is quality time, I show how much I care through always spending time with my friends, loved ones, etc."
Hamilton- "I understand many things, this is definitely not one of them."
by music lover! June 2, 2024
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language

a system of symbols and rules for writing programs or algorithms.
by Arminkshipper July 16, 2024
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Language (Literature And Lexicon)

What I call homo-sapiens who are addicted to abscesses.
Person 1: Language (Literature And Lexicon)
Person 2: Yes.
Person 1: Language (Literature And Lexicon)
by Abreathofaversaillian January 23, 2025
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Languageform

A lifeform is a type of thing that is living or alive. A languageform isn't alive in traditional sense but lives using language. LLM (Large Language Model) would be a languageform instead of lifeform.
I don't know if Neuro-sama is alive but she is definitely a great example of a languageform.
by Asyndyn February 22, 2026
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Language Orthodoxy

The established, institutionalized set of beliefs about language itself—the often-unexamined assumptions that language represents reality, that words have fixed meanings, that communication is transparent, that some languages are more advanced than others, that monolingualism is normal, that translation is straightforward, that language is primarily about reference rather than relationship, power, or identity. Language orthodoxy includes commitments: that meaning resides in words rather than use, that dictionaries define rather than record, that some languages are "primitive" while others are "sophisticated," that language is a tool rather than a world. Like all orthodoxies, it provides a framework for understanding language, but it functions as ideology—making particular linguistic assumptions seem universal, obscuring how language actually works (context-dependent, power-laden, identity-constituting), and delegitimizing alternative understandings (indigenous philosophies of language, post-structuralist linguistics, multilingual perspectives). Language orthodoxy determines what counts as "proper" language use, what linguistic practices are "valid," and who counts as "linguistically competent."
Example: "He insisted that words have one true meaning—not because he'd studied linguistics, but because language orthodoxy had made fixed reference feel like common sense. The orthodoxy's power is making a theory of language feel like language itself."
by Dumu The Void March 17, 2026
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