In popular parlance, this verdict is sometimes jokingly referred to as "not guilty and don't do it again".
This always occurs with the popular parlance and occasionally in cultivated Luandese Portuguese.
In popular parlance, an envoy can mean a diplomat of any rank.
It can also refer to, in popular parlance, inflections applied on notes.
The word menopause is also often used in popular parlance to mean all the years of postmenopause.
The biblical tales were simply "myths," which, in popular parlance, now meant that they were not true.
However, since 1977, their citizenship has not affected the status of their parents, who may well be undocumented ("illegal" in popular parlance).
She couldn't remember precisely when, during the past couple of generations, the "City" part had been dropped from popular parlance.
In popular parlance, I had my cake and was greedily eating it.
Worse still, he had failed to pass the minimum mental faculties test, which made him in popular parlance a chickenhead.