Crossword-Solution: LINGO 5 letters, 105 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 6

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Lingo n. Language; speech; dialect.

Anagrams

Word Anagrams
LINGO anagram ILONG, LIGNO, LOGIN, LONGI

We have 105 clues for the answer “LINGO”

Clue Answers
"IMO," "LOL," etc. 1 answer
Adspeak or journalese 1 answer
Bobby soxer speech. 1 answer
Buzzwords 1 answer
Buzzwords, collectively 1 answer
Chuck Woolery's GSN show 1 answer
Clubby jargon 1 answer
Computerese or legalese 1 answer
FOREIGN language (derog.) 1 answer
Game show co-hosted by former Miss USA Shandi Finnessey 1 answer
Get to the site, maybe 1 answer
Industry slang 1 answer
Inside vocabulary 1 answer
Insider talk 1 answer
Jargon of a particular field 1 answer
Jargon or patois 1 answer
Jazzman's jive, e.g. 1 answer
Language that's often colorful 1 answer
Legalese is one 1 answer
Legalese, for instance 1 answer
Legalese, for one 1 answer
Newfoundlander's slang, e.g. 1 answer
Part of a trainee's learning curve, maybe 1 answer
Shop Slang expert Partridge 1 answer
Shop slang 1 answer
Special jargon 1 answer
Special terms 1 answer
Specialist's vocabulary 1 answer
Specialized shop talk 1 answer
Specialized speech 1 answer
Specialized vocab 1 answer
Speech to industry insiders? 1 answer
Talk in a field 1 answer
Talk of the trade 1 answer
Techspeak, e.g. 1 answer
Techspeak, for example 1 answer
Trade vocabulary. 1 answer
Unfamiliar language 1 answer
Vocational vocabulary 1 answer
Words not everyone understands 1 answer
foreign or unfamiliar language or jargon 1 answer
Group jargon 2 answers
Group's jargon 2 answers
Legalese, e.g. 2 answers
Peculiar language. 2 answers
Shop jargon 2 answers
Game show hosted by Chuck Woolery 2 answers
Special language 2 answers
That's what they say? 2 answers
foreign language 3 answers
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Kind of apple
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E
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A
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R
Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
TERAE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
13 +1

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Sentences with LINGO (5)

But it warn’t no use; he stormed right along, and said any man that pretended to be an Englishman and couldn’t imitate the lingo no better than what he did was a fraud and a liar.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) 1993
Bower, the late Ernest Haycox, and other manufacturers of range novels who have known their West at firsthand, he would find, spottedly, a surprising amount of truth about land and men, a fluency in genuine cowboy lingo, and a respect for the code of conduct.
Guide to Life and Literature of the Southwest J. Frank Dobie 1995
Did you bring off the ambergris, you beast, when your junk sank? Where is it now? How many men have you? What arms have you got? Have your men got a rifle?--Charlie, put that all to him in your lingo, so as to make sure that he understands.
Moran of the Lady Letty Frank Norris 2008
She had a way of standing in our midst, nodding around, and addressing us in what she imagined to be French: ‘_Bienne_, _hommes_! _ça va bienne_?’ I took the freedom to reply in the same lingo: _Bienne_, _femme_! _ça va couci-couci tout d’même_, _la bourgeoise_!’ And at that, when we had all laughed with a little more heartiness than was entirely civil, ‘I told you he was quite an oddity!’ says she in triumph.
St. Ives Robert Louis Stevenson 2010
With this end in view they dressed themselves in expensive costumes, took the trouble to learn the "lingo" spoken in the country, went to the extremity of copying the ways of the native women by painting their faces, and in one or two cases imitated the laxity of their morals.
Worldly Ways and Byways Eliot Gregory 2007

Quotes with LINGO (3)

But, the stultifying lingo aside, the question I raise is a vital one for us all, we are all stuck with trying to find the meaning of our lives, and the only thing we have to work on, or with, is our past.
Robert Penn Warren A Place to Come To
Sometimes guitar riffs get repeated over and over ("vamping," in the lingo of musicians), but generally there is a soloist proving variation that runs above that background, lest the song sound monotonous. Philip Glass's minimalist compositions (such as the soundtrack to 'Koyaanisqatsi') deviate from much of the classical music that preceded them, with much less obvious movement than, say, the Romantic-era compositions that his work seems to rebel against, yet his works, too,…
Gary F. Marcus Guitar Zero: The New Musician and the Science of Learning
In Western culture, virtually everything is understood through the process of storytelling, often to the detriment of reality. When we recount history, we tend to use the life experience of one person — the “journey” of a particular “hero,” in the lingo of the mythologist Joseph Campbell — as a prism for understanding everything else.
Chuck Klosterman
Where this answer appears

Appears in: Boston Globe, Crossroads, CrosSynergy, Daily Beast, LAT, Newsday, New Yorker, NY Sun, NYT, Onion, S&S, Universal, USA TODAY, WP, WSJ.

Used 222 times in crossword archives (1951–2024).