of the vernacular
(some belong elsewhere...)

The many meanings and faces of "vernacular" Victor Mair

Word from the hood: The lexicon of African-American vernacular English

Viral Vernacular: The COVID-19 Lexicon

Etymology of vernacular etymonline

The Burning Man dictionary: Playa vernacular that you need to know mixmag.net

Do jargon, argot and vernacular mean the same thing? Well, not really. Thomas Moore Devlin at babbel.com

English idioms, phrasal verbs, and colloquialisms packardcommunications.com

100 Phrasal Verbs Used as Commands engVid.com

Gay talk : formerly entitled The queens' vernacular : a gay lexicon Bruce Rodgers (1979) at Inyternet Archive

The lexical fallacy in emotion research: Mistaking vernacular words for psychological entities Fiske, Alan Page Psychological Review, Vol 127(1), Jan 2020, 95-113

Vernacular lexemes appear self-evident, so we unwittingly reify them. But the words and phrases of natural languages comprise a treacherous basis for identifying valid psychological constructs, as I illustrate in emotion research. Like other vernacular lexemes, the emotion labels in natural languages do not have definite, stable, mutually transparent meanings, and any one vernacular word may be used to denote multiple scientifically distinct entities. In addition, the consequential choice of one lexeme to name a scientific construct rather than any of its partial synonyms is often arbitrary. Furthermore, a given vernacular lexeme from any one of the world's 7000 languages rarely maps one-to-one into an exactly corresponding vernacular lexeme in other languages. Words related to anger in different languages illustrate this. Since each language constitutes a distinct taxonomy of things in the world, most or all languages must fail to cut nature at its joints. In short, it is pernicious to use one language's dictionary as the source of psychological constructs. So scientists need to coin new technical names for scientifically derived constructs—names precisely defined in terms of the constellation of features or components that characterize the constructs they denote. The development of the kama muta construct illustrates one way to go about this. Kama muta is the emotion evoked by sudden intensification of communal sharing—universally experienced but not isomorphic with any vernacular lexeme such as heart warming, moving, touching, collective pride, tender, nostalgic, sentimental, Awww—so cute!.