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idiomatic
[id-ee-uh-mat-ik]
adjective
peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect.
idiomatic French.
containing or using many idioms.
having a distinct style or character, especially in the arts.
idiomatic writing; an idiomatic composer.
Other Word Forms
- idiomatically adverb
- idiomaticalness noun
- idiomaticity noun
- nonidiomatic adjective
- nonidiomatical adjective
- nonidiomatically adverb
- nonidiomaticalness noun
- unidiomatic adjective
- unidiomatically adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of idiomatic1
Example Sentences
The German novelist most recently authored “Tyll,” shortlisted for the 2020 International Booker Prize, and his translator, Ross Benjamin, has rendered his new historical fiction in idiomatic English prose.
I was confident I was being scammed in some way but the idiomatic language and contextual knowledge of Westminster was unsettling.
Added Fraction: “Even if we spoke Japanese as a second language, that idiomatic stuff is the hardest thing to get.”
“Signing is very idiomatic, it’s conveying concepts with your face and hands, so we ended up changing the script,” Barclay says.
Fairy tales, idiomatic expressions, warrior tales all amplified human fear, and led to the systematic extermination of wolves across Britain and Europe.
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