| Rating | Solver | Clue |
|---|---|---|
| IDIOM | Vernacular | |
| LINGO | Vernacular | |
| VERNACULOUS | Vernacular. | |
| NONVERNACULAR | Not vernacular. | |
| VERNACULARISM | A vernacular idiom. | |
| DEKKO | Equally vernacular word for squiz | |
| SPRINGCHICKEN | Young one, in the vernacular | |
| VULGAR | The vernacular, or common language. | |
| GARBO | Waste removal engineer - in the vernacular | |
| VERNACULARLY | In a vernacular manner; in the vernacular. | |
| VERNACULARIZATION | The act or process of making vernacular, or the state of being made vernacular. | |
| VERNACULAR | The vernacular language; one's mother tongue; often, the common forms of expression in a particular locality. | |
| NATURALIZE | To receive or adopt as native, natural, or vernacular; to make one's own; as, to naturalize foreign words. | |
| FARSE | An addition to, or a paraphrase of, some part of the Latin service in the vernacular; -- common in English before the Reformation. | |
| MACARONIC | A kind of burlesque composition, in which the vernacular words of one or more modern languages are intermixed with genuine Latin words, and wit... | |
| SANSKRIT | The ancient language of the Hindoos, long since obsolete in vernacular use, but preserved to the present day as the literary and sacred dialect... | |