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Jargon may serve the purpose of a "gatekeeper" in conversation, signaling who is allowed into certain forms of conversation. Jargon may serve this function by dictating to which direction or depth a conversation about or within the context of a certain field or profession will go. [1]For example, a conversation between two professionals in which one person has little previous interaction or knowledge of the other person could go one of at least two possible ways, either the person who the other professional does not know does not use, or does not correctly use, the jargon of their respective field and is little regarded or remembered beyond small talk or fairly insignificant in this conversation, or, if the person does use particular jargon, showing their knowledge in the field to be legitimate, educated, or of particular significance, the other people then open the conversation up in an in-depth or professional manner .[2]
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Great example of the use of jargon in professional conversations. Think about keeping track of citations as you go -- its much faster and easier than going back and adding them after the fact! -- Shannon
- ^ writer, Richard Nordquist Richard Nordquist is a freelance; English, former professor of; Grammar, Rhetoric who wrote college-level; textbooks, Composition. "What Is Jargon and Why Is It Used?". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^ Campbell, Gordon (2014-01-22), "Jargon", Oxford Art Online, Oxford University Press, retrieved 2019-02-26