How to Use argot in a Sentence

argot

noun
  • Something of a dandy, Toby runs a rough assortment of helpers—babysitters and pavement artists, in the argot of the trade.
    Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, 14 Dec. 2020
  • The term is an example of a curious upstairs-downstairs argot in what is at its core a working-class sport.
    Michael Powell, New York Times, 25 July 2019
  • In the United States, basic mental-health care remains a luxury item; there’s a reason that the most fluent speakers of the trending argot tend to be wealthy and white.
    Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 26 Mar. 2021
  • Mrs. Trump, a former model, who impressed the designer with her command of fashion argot, had her own ideas.
    Ruth La Ferla, New York Times, 25 Jan. 2017
  • Among the war’s contributions to the American argot was that of the teetotaling secretary of the Navy, Josephus Daniels.
    Roger Lowenstein, WSJ, 21 Dec. 2018
  • This is a poem rendered in rough and rowdy seaman’s argot, about a petty officer dying in his hammock.
    Colin Fleming, Washington Post, 26 Aug. 2019
  • The problem with that, of course, is that unpredictability — what is rather grandly known in the sport’s argot as competitive balance — is at least part of the secret of soccer’s appeal.
    New York Times, 18 Apr. 2021
  • During her time at Breitbart, McHugh consistently made racially charged statements on her Twitter feed and used the argot of the alt-right twittersphere.
    Rosie Gray, The Atlantic, 7 June 2017
  • The world of mainstream Democratic politics gives voice to these sentiments in a more familiar argot, one aimed at voters rather than activists.
    New York Times, 8 June 2022
  • The best of these stories double as primers on the curious, whispered rituals of the West Wing, its coded self-assertions and exclusionary argot.
    Katy Waldman, Slate Magazine, 29 Sep. 2017
  • Instead of a clubhouse on the beach, there’s a virtual global juvenile hall, where kids gather, invent an argot, adopt alter egos, and shoot one another down.
    Nick Paumgarten, The New Yorker, 14 May 2018
  • One hundred percent green, in Kirby’s argot, means carbon neutrality with a twist.
    Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic, 15 Dec. 2020
  • If ever a company was self-consciously focused on making an impact—changing the world, in the argot of Fortune’s annual list—it’s Apple (aapl, -1.59%).
    Adam Lashinsky, Fortune, 11 Sep. 2017
  • Even the distinctive accent and argot of East Los Angeles has roots there, according to ethnolinguists.
    Gustavo Arellano, Los Angeles Times, 7 Aug. 2019
  • Characters speak in modern slang, Shakespearean verse, ’80s pop lyrics and that timeless argot of clumsy melodrama.
    Charles McNultytheater Critic, Los Angeles Times, 9 Dec. 2022
  • In the traditional account of this process, a creole most often arose from a pidgin: a simple, improvised argot drawing most of its words from the (usually European) languages of the masters.
    The Economist, 1 Feb. 2018
  • Her speech—casual, chatty—is inflected with the argot of the Washington policy circuit.
    Jonathan Blitzer, The New Yorker, 28 Jan. 2022
  • Yet the quant argot is useful when considering perhaps the biggest fear stalking financial markets: a sustained rise in inflation that would be bad for both equities and bonds.
    The Economist, 6 Mar. 2021
  • While these long motion-capture sequences crackle with thrilling technical argot and are pretty interesting in themselves, the real plot lies elsewhere.
    Washington Post, 15 Nov. 2021
  • And then there’s his inborn ear for every shade of human babble, here a transcendent four-hander, there a screwball travelogue, everywhere argot and idiolect and argument.
    New York Times, 23 Apr. 2020
  • Every generation develops a new argot to separate itself from the one before.
    Kevin Fisher-Paulson, San Francisco Chronicle, 5 Apr. 2022
  • Leaders of the Democratic Party, eagerly chasing these semantic developments, have taken up the new argot, too.
    Philip Kennicott, The Denver Post, 24 May 2017
  • Still, the statement did at least mark a telltale pivot away from the site’s native argot of technological utopianism, which continually worked to present itself as a neutral platform that more-or-less spontaneously brought the world together.
    Jeet Heer, New Republic, 7 Oct. 2017
  • That means the companies must translate the demanding argot of genetics — alleles and phenotypes and centromeres — into something approachable, even simple, for physicians and laypersons alike.
    Thomas Goetz, WIRED, 17 Nov. 2007
  • Melding the argots of Silicon Valley and self-care, Joyous delivers treatment primarily by text message, replete with exclamation points and emojis.
    Chris Hamby, New York Times, 20 Feb. 2023
  • Cobbs’s career encapsulates the shift of sensitivity training from its literary roots to corporate argot.
    Beth Blum, The New Yorker, 24 Sep. 2020
  • Those unfamiliar with creoles, thinking them mere patois, argot or vernacular, are missing a glorious display of the ingenuity of those speakers who turned old languages into something brilliantly new.
    The Economist, 1 Feb. 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'argot.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Last Updated: