Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun Slangy character or quality: as, the slanginess of one's speech.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun Quality of being slangy.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The state or condition of being slangy.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun casualness in use of language

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

slangy +‎ -ness

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Examples

  • Mr. Callahan's book is very good, but he is much under the sway of the willful subjectivity and slanginess of Pauline Kael.

    Hail, the Conquering Heroine Scott Eyman 2012

  • Schacht really is Holden's amoral 21st-century cousin: He shares the profane slanginess and the petulant self-righteousness of Salinger's famous malcontent.

    Sam Munson's ‘November Criminals,' about a disaffected teen in Washington, D.C. Michael Lindgren 2010

  • Still, though, however contemptible (and blatant, insulting, blah blah blah) it was, Bush's lie had about it an appealing teenage slanginess.

    Ellis Weiner: A Tale of Two Georges 2008

  • It's true that American academics tend to be more formal stuffier? than their current British counterparts, all stereotypes aside, although the current trend in British academic prose--rapid shifts from the formal to the informal register, occasional slanginess, offhanded walloping of other scholars--may be its own "form" instead of something truly "personal."

    Prosaic 2005

  • It's true that American academics tend to be more formal stuffier? than their current British counterparts, all stereotypes aside, although the current trend in British academic prose--rapid shifts from the formal to the informal register, occasional slanginess, offhanded walloping of other scholars--may be its own "form" instead of something truly "personal."

    The Little Professor: 2005

  • Its ominous English title is appropriate enough for its mood, except for the easy current slanginess of that phrase, mouthed by so many of us now on trivial occasions.

    At Least One Way Thompson, John 1975

  • "His contrasts of slanginess and gentility, his mingled audacity and _insouciance_ of character, and all the picturesque ins and outs of his moral architecture, so different from the severe plainness of the spiritual temples common in New Boston," do take the eye of peace-bred

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 117, July, 1867. Various

  • The English newspapers, with the exception of a few anomalies such as Pink-Un, lean in the other direction; their fault is not slanginess, but an otiose ponderosity—in Dean Alford’s words, “the insisting on calling common things by uncommon names; changing our ordinary short Saxon nouns and verbs for long words derived from the Latin.

    Chapter 11. American Slang. 1. Its Origin and Nature Henry Louis 1921

  • As unavoidable circumstances forced one to take him, -- commonness, slanginess, appalling ignorance, and all, -- one could not leave him.

    T. Tembarom 1913

  • Whether they are recognized as slang will certainly depend in part on whether the occupation is familiar, though sometimes the familiarity will disguise, and sometimes it will conceal the slanginess.

    Slang. 1908

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