Blue-sky thinking A visionary idea without always having a.
Example of jargon names. Land and expand Workplace jargon meaning to sell a small solution to a client and then once the solution has been sold to expand upon the same solution in the clients environment. A project that cant be gotten rid of no. Some examples of jargon include.
Another persons perspective or opinion. Acronyms are words formed from the initial letters of other words. One example is planned giving even those within the profession disagree as to the meaning.
Medical jargon I need a script in order to pick up the medicine. Vocabulary that emerges around technologies including words to describe the design operation maintenance and use of technology. An acronym is usually pronounceable as a word eg.
For example medieval guilds could use this as one means of informal protectionism. The main house or house of the owner was known as the white house its usual color if painted the Big House Bulls Mansh or headquarters The bunkhouse was equally well known as the dog-house dice-house dump shack or dive while the cook-shack if it was a separate building was spoken of as the mess-house grub-house. Equivalent for prescription Medical jargon I need a.
Short for absent without leave AWOL is military jargon used to describe a person whose whereabouts are unknown. Normally business jargon concisely illustrates a common point or business situation. Jargon is the term for specialized or technical language that is only understood by those who are members of a group or who perform a specific trade.
Business jargon originates from many places. Although technical jargons primary purpose is to aid technical communication not to exclude outsiders by serving as an argot it can have both effects at once and can provide a technical ingroup with shibboleths. Below are a few examples of popular buzz phrases that constitute many of the most-used phrases in workplace jargon.