Flashcards: Words that Describe Language Rhetorical and Literary Terms
archaic
language that is outdated, no longer commonly used
bombastic
language that sounds arrogant, like you’re trying to impress someone
colloquial
language that is ordinary and familiar; everyday language
cultured
educated, polished, refined, sophisticated language
detached
language that is unemotional, distant
esoteric
language that has hidden meanings; private, secret, confidential
euphemistic
language that is used to politely talk about something that is usually really offensive
homespun
language that is plain, unsophisticated; the way an “Average Joe” would speak
idiomatic
using many idioms, which are sort of unusual expressions or sayings in a particular language (like “It’s raining cats and dogs”)
insipid
language that is dull and uninteresting
jargon
language that comes from a specialized field that people within that field are familiar with (computers, sports, business)
learned
sophisticated, academic language
moralistic
language that tries to teach morals or right/wrong; writing that preaches a sort of message about life
obscure
language that has hidden meanings that are difficult to understand
obtuse
language that lacks intelligence or significant meaning; dull writing
pedantic
language that is overly concerned with little details and sounding really academic; language in which a person trying to show off how s/he is by using “big words”
pretentious
writing that exaggerates how smart a person is; when a person is trying to sound superior and brilliant
sensuous
writing that appeals to the senses, especially writing that creates a sexual or seductive mood/tone
trite
language that is worn out, full of cliches; language that doesn’t really say anything important
vulgar
language that is offensive