Language as spoken or written by the common people.
Of, relating to, or written in the ancient Egyptian script that developed from Lower Egyptian hieratic writing starting from around 650 BCE and was chiefly used to write the Demotic phase of the Egyptian language, with simplified and cursive characters that no longer corresponded directly to their hieroglyphic precursors.
Of or for the common people.
Of, relating to, or written in the form of modern vernacular Greek.
The language of a people or a national language.
Language unique to a particular group of people.
A style of architecture involving local building materials and styles, not imported.
A language lacking standardization or a written form.
Everyday speech or dialect, including colloquialisms, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
Indigenous spoken language, as distinct from a literary or liturgical language such as Ecclesiastical Latin.
Of or related to local building materials and styles; not imported.
Connected to a collective memory; not imported.
Of or pertaining to everyday language, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
Belonging to the country of one's birth; one's own by birth or nature.