locution
noun
- language functional unit
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /loʊ̯ˈkju.ʃn̩/
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from Latin locūtiō, locūtiōnem (“speech”), from loquor (“speak”). Compare the French cognate locution.
- A phrase or expression peculiar to or characteristic of a given person or group of people.
“The television show host is widely recognized for his all-too-common locutions.”
“Another way fathers impact sons is that sons, once their voices have changed in puberty, invariably answer the telephone with the same locutions and intonations of their fathers.”
- The use of a word or phrase in an unusual or specialized way.
“So it cannot be supposed that promisings differ from other word-givings in that a word-giver makes a promise only if he or she uses the locution "I promise".”
- Style of discourse or usage, or any particular utterance in such style.
“informal locutions”
- A supernatural revelation where a religious figure, statue or icon speaks, usually to a saint.