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lingo

 - 5 dictionary results

lin⋅go

1[ling-goh]
–noun, plural -goes.
1. the language and speech, esp. the jargon, slang, or argot, of a particular field, group, or individual: gamblers' lingo.
2. language or speech, esp. if strange or foreign.

Origin:
1650–60; appar. alter. of lingua (franca); cf. Polari lingo language

lin⋅go

2[ling-goh]
–noun, plural -goes.
lingoe.

lin⋅goe

[ling-goh]
–noun
1. a metal weight attached to the cords of a Jacquard harness, for lowering the warp threads after they have been raised and for keeping the harness cords taut.
2. the same object attached to a drawloom.
Also, lingo.


Origin:
prob. < F lingot ingot
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To lingo
lin·go   (lĭng'gō)   
n.   pl. lin·goes
  1. Language that is unintelligible or unfamiliar.

  2. The specialized vocabulary of a particular field or discipline: spoke to me in the lingo of fundamentalism. See Synonyms at dialect.


[Probably from Portuguese lingoa, from Latin lingua, language; see dghū- in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: A look at the entry in the Indo-European roots entry for *dghū- will show that the words tongue, language, and lingo are related, all going back to the Indo-European root *dghū-, "tongue." The relationship between language and lingo is not particularly surprising given their related meanings and common root, but one might be curious about the routes by which these two words came into English. Language, as did so many of our important borrowings from Latin, passed through French into English during the Middle Ages, the forms involved being Latin lingua, "language," its descendant, Old French langue, and its derivative, langage. Lingo, on the other hand, entered English after the end of the Middle Ages when Europe had opened itself to the larger world. We have probably borrowed lingo from lingoa, a Portuguese descendant of Latin lingua. The Portuguese were great traders before the English were, and the sense "foreign language" was likely strengthened as the Portuguese traveled around the world. Interestingly enough, the first recorded instance of lingo in English is in the New World (1660) in a reference to the "Dutch lingo." The development in sense to "unintelligible language" and "specialized language" is an obvious one.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Computing Dictionary

Lingo
An animation scripting language.
[MacroMind Director V3.0 Interactivity Manual, MacroMind 1991].

The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © 1993-2007 Denis Howe
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