(1) Oddly, in British English it is not these days a vulgarism , or at least only a very mild one.(2) Orators are not improvising without adequate preparation; they are ‘winging it’ (this American vulgarism surely never arose till the 1990s?)(3) this pronunciation was stigmatized as a vulgarism by some commentators(4) Despite this, the police did absolutely nothing (the American vulgarism , Sweet Fanny Adam, is the expression which comes to mind) and stood by watching the fun.(5) Therefore all the tricks of rhetoric were used: rhymes, puns, vulgarisms and homilies.(6) He was an editor who hated screen violence, and vulgarisms - ‘squeamish’, she called him - and there were constant battles over her copy.(7) Elizabethan and even 18th century authors, who represent vulgarisms so frequently, do not seem to use omissions and misplacings of h's as a characteristic of low class speech.(8) The language that he described as American was full of regional variation, new words borrowed from immigrant groups, figurative usage from such institutions as railroading and baseball, jaunty slang, and raucous vulgarisms .(9) It's just spoken English, not just vulgarisms but slang and stuff like that.(10) They were, I thought, vulgarisms : just fashion and status accoutrements.(11) In the history of genre-study or formalism, the Essay deserves a mention, particularly for its inclusiveness: prose, dialect, vulgarisms , and the low are all in.(12) The manuscript was intended to point out and correct vulgarisms that had entered the Latin language.(13) It's a neat theatrical trick that sees us introduced to the intentionally harsh vulgarisms of sexual parlance.(14) But Michelle can only think of vulgarisms : she stands for a generation that, like Shakespeare's Caliban, has yet to be taught a civilized language.