English edit

Etymology edit

From jargonist +‎ -ic or jargon +‎ -istic.

Adjective edit

jargonistic (comparative more jargonistic, superlative most jargonistic)

  1. Characterised by jargon.
    • 1973, David A. Hansen, Thomas R. Culley, The police training officer:
      Policemen are forever being modest, jargonistic, officialese.
    • 1980 August 2, Lee Edelman, Joseph Litvak, “"Are Homosexual Murders Given Preference By City Hall?"”, in Gay Community News, page 5:
      Note that Hamill shrewdly opts for the awkward phrase "sexual lifestyle" rather than "sexual orientation." He does so because it allows him to imply what he knows better than to assert: that sexual preference is simply a matter of rational choice. Whatever the jargonistic catchphrase "sexual lifestyle" may connote, it does not signify sexual orientation, because even Denis Hamill knows that neither he nor we sat down, surveyed our options, and then consciously chose to be either straight or gay.