| 释义 | 
		patoispa‧tois /ˈpætwɑː/ noun (plural patois /-twɑːz/) [countable, uncountable]    patoisOrigin: 1600-1700 French  - a patois of the Louisiana backwoods
 - the patois of lawyers
 
 - And then, protected against the pitfalls of this curious patois, you can book your ticket to Tokyo in complete confidence.
 - Both neighborhoods had a strong spiritual sense, a different musical culture, unique foods, and unappreciated patois.
 - His comprehension of the patois was total.
 - Its leaders and managers refuse to speak a polyglot language derived from the patois of lawyers, accountants, and pop psychologists.
 - The Latin words died, replaced by ones in patois.
 
   ► Languagesaccented, adjectiveAfrikaans, nounAnglo-Saxon, nounArabic, nounBengali, nounbilingual, adjectiveCantonese, nounChinese, nounconversant, adjectivecreole, nounDanish, noundialect, noundictation, noundirect method, noundub, verbDutch, nounEnglish, nounEsperanto, nounFarsi, nounFlemish, nounfluent, adjectiveFrancophone, adjectiveFranglais, nounFrench, adjectiveGaelic, nounGerman, nounGermanic, adjectiveGreek, nounHebraic, adjectiveHebrew, nounHindi, nounIndo-European, adjectiveItalian, nounItalo-, prefixJapanese, nounLatin, nounLatin, adjectivelinguist, nounlinguistics, nounMandarin, nounMaori, nounmodern language, nounmonolingual, adjectivemother tongue, nounmultilingual, adjectivenative speaker, nounoral, nounpatois, nounPersian, nounPolish, adjectivePortuguese, nounRomance language, nounRomany, nounRussian, nounSanskrit, nounsecond language, nounSemitic, adjectivesign, nounsign, verbsign language, nounSinhalese, nounSpanish, nounspeak, verb-speak, suffixspeaker, nounSwedish, nountransliterate, verbTurkish, nounUrdu, nounusage, nounvernacular, nounvocabulary, nounWelsh, noun    a spoken form of a language used by the people of a small area and different from the national or standard language  |