>>55043Nope.
The words someone chooses to use and the meaning ascribed to those words are a meaningful property of speech. The ability to communicate implies having people to communicate with; people who can understand the message being conveyed. It denotes membership of a group.
Someone who refers to any woman he knows as "bitches" reveals he doesn't hold them to any respectable regard.
Many Brazilians, foreigners in general, are easily identified by a native English speaker. People who have English as a second language tend to choose words that are close to their mother tongue; words that are often alien to native speakers.
Jargon is the professional equivalent. The difference is they tend to be turned inwardly at the group itself. It's used to facilitate communication among professionals. This is possible because professionals are knowledgeable and they are able to pack huge amount of knowledge into a single word, making for communication that is dense and terse but also clear, unambiguous and easily understandable to the initiated. The effective use of those words has direct implications on your status in the group; it is proof you're a veteran. Doctors don't say "sugar in piss", they say
glycosuria. They may talk to you on those terms but that's not what they write on your medical record and in research papers.
Just because you're uneducated channer doesn't mean everything is a meme.