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The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

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jamboree n. gathering, get-together, party, celebration, fˆte, festival,<br />

festivity, carnival, frolic, revelry, spree, carouse, jubilee,<br />

revels, charivari: Everyone is invited to the annual jamboree<br />

in the village square.<br />

jangle v. 1 clatter, clash, rattle, clang, clank, crash, ring, jingle:<br />

<strong>The</strong> chains jangled as the prisoners marched to their cells. 2<br />

jar, upset, irritate: <strong>The</strong> continuous screaming <strong>of</strong> the sirens<br />

jangled my nerves.<br />

--n. 3 jangling, clatter, clash, rattle, jarring, clang,<br />

clanging, clank, clanking, crash, clangour, noise, din, racket,<br />

clamour, dissonance, cacophony, reverberation, Literary stridor:<br />

I heard the jangle <strong>of</strong> the rag-and-bone man's cart in the next<br />

street.<br />

jar° n. crock; receptacle, vessel, container, urn, pot, vase; jug,<br />

pitcher, ewer, flagon, carafe, bottle, amphora: We always keep<br />

some small change in that blue jar.<br />

jarý v. 1 shake, agitate, disturb, stir, shock, jolt, jounce,<br />

bounce, jog, jerk, jiggle, joggle: Don't jar the oven or the<br />

cake will collapse. 2 disagree, conflict, clash, bicker,<br />

quarrel, wrangle, oppose, discord: She finds that her emotions<br />

about her ex-husband are jarring. 3 disturb, upset, disconcert,<br />

unsettle, disquiet, bother, trouble, vex, gall, <strong>of</strong>fend, take<br />

aback, irritate, grate, irk, nettle, annoy: It jars me to think<br />

that they got <strong>of</strong>f with light sentences.<br />

--n. 4 shock, start, jolt, surprise: Seeing Sam after all<br />

those years gave me quite a jar.<br />

jargon n. 1 cant, argot, parlance, idiom, vernacular, slang; patois,<br />

Creole, dialect, pidgin; Colloq lingo: In the jargon <strong>of</strong><br />

philately, this is known as a 'first day cover'. 2 blether or<br />

US also blather, chatter, babble, gibberish, jabber, gabble,<br />

gobbledegook or gobbledygook, prattle, patter, drivel, cackle,<br />

jabberwocky, twaddle, (stuff and) nonsense, rubbish, codswallop,<br />

balderdash, bunk, humbug, palaver, bavardage, Colloq rot,<br />

garbage, hogwash, bosh, piffle, flapdoodle, chit-chat, gab,<br />

claptrap, Slang bull, crap: When I questioned my bank manager<br />

about the fee, he just gave me a lot <strong>of</strong> jargon.

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