Englishfor English speakers
lang
adjective
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(obsolete) long
Lang
properNoun
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} from Old English lang (“long”), a nickname for a tall person.
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}, a variant of Lange.
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}, a variant of de Lange.
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}, anglicized from Chinese 郎 (Láng), used as a translation of Manchu ᠨᡳᠣᡥᡠᡵᡠ (Niohuru, literally “wolf”) for its homophony with .
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A settlement in New South Wales, Australia.
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A town in Styria, Austria. Ultimately from Proto-Slavic *lǫka (“meadow”), or perhaps of Celtic origin.
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A village in Saskatchewan, Canada.
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A village in Gilan, Iran. From Persian لنگ (lang).
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A ghost town in Georgia, United States; named after postmaster Benjamin F. Lang.
language
Noun
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A language is all the words used by a group of people, and grammar (the rules for making them into sentences). People who speak the same language can understand each other; people speaking different languages cannot understand each other.
The English language has easy grammar but difficult spelling and pronunciation.
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Language is the usage of words in a specific subject, the vocabulary of the subject.
This document is written in legal language, only lawyers can understand it.
There is a special chemistry language that you need to use when answering questions in the chemistry examinations.
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Language is the special usage of words in a passage of text.
The language in this document is very offensive and biased.
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A language refers to computer language, a group of code that tells a computer or machine what to do.
There are many programming languages out there, it really depends on what kind of software that you are trying to create.
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A language is a flat plate in or below the flue pipe of an organ, a languet.