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References
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Literacy GlossaryHomonym. A word with different origin and meaning but the same oral or written form as one or more other words, as bear (an animal) vs. bear (to support) vs.
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[PDF] 19 LEXICAL SEMANTICS - Stanford Universityof the examples in this chapter. We generally reserve the word homonym for two senses which share both a pro- nunciation and an orthography. A special case ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Words in English: Morphemes### Summary of Homonyms Section
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Glossary of terms, abbreviations, and symbols - Penn Linguisticshomonym, Can refer to either homograph or homophone. homophone, One of two or ... In the resulting predicate-argument sense, in linguistics, the term ...
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[PDF] Homonymy in the Developing Mental Lexicon - KU ScholarWorksHomonyms are words that have one phonological form but two distinct meanings (e.g., 'bat' referring to an animal or 'bat' referring to a type of.Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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What is a Homonym | Glossary of Linguistic TermsDefinition: Here are three senses of homonym. A word that has the same pronunciation as another. Homonyms differ from each other.
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(PDF) The Most Frequent English Homonyms - Academia.eduThis article distinguishes homonymy, homophony, homography amd polysemy, and provides a list of the most frequent homonyms using corpus-derived data.<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] CLASSIFICATION OF HOMONYMS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGEThis article discusses the homonyms of the English language and their classification considered by different scientists. Many famous foreign linguists, ...
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Brain Representations of Lexical Ambiguity: Disentangling MeaningsTo further examine how the brain processes different types of ambiguity, we contrasted homonyms and polysemous words. The results showed that processing ...
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A comparison of homonym and novel word learning - PubMed CentralThis study compares homonym learning to novel word learning by three- to four-year-old children to determine whether homonyms are learned more rapidly or more ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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The Representation of Polysemy: MEG Evidence - PMC - NIHThis hypothesis draws a crucial difference between polysemy and homonymy: In polysemy, senses share a morphological root, whereas homonyms have separate lexical ...
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How is polysemy different from homonymy? - Academic MarkerThe main difference between homonyms and polysemes is that homonymy is an accidental similarity between words while polysemous words are connected in meaning.
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Homonymy and polysemy - ScienceDirect.comIn part 1, it is argued that there are several disadvantages to the traditional description of the distinction between polysemy and homonymy.
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What Are Synonyms, Antonyms and Homonyms? - YourDictionaryJul 28, 2021 · Homonyms are words that have the same spelling and pronunciation but different meanings. Because these words sound and look the same but mean ...
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Synonym vs. Antonym vs. Homonym (Grammar Rules) - Writer's DigestMar 8, 2021 · Homonym. Synonym is when one of two or more words or phrases of the same language have a similar meaning. For instance, synonyms for the word ...
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Definition and Examples of Paronyms - ThoughtCoMay 4, 2025 · Paronyms differ from homonyms, which share the same spelling or pronunciation. In grammar and morphology, a paronym is a word that is ...
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Types of Words: Paronyms, Homophones, Homographs, Homonyms ...May 5, 2013 · Homonyms are words with identical spellings and pronunciations but different meanings. Homonyms are also homographs. For example: left – adverb ...
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What Are Capitonyms and How Do I Use Them? - ProWritingAidJul 14, 2020 · A capitonym is a type of homograph. A homograph is a word that has different meanings but is spelled exactly the same.
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Homonym - Etymology, Origin & MeaningFrom Greek homonymos meaning "same name," this 1807 term denotes words pronounced or spelled alike but differing in meaning; origin traces through Latin and ...
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Aristotle - Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophySep 25, 2008 · In the opening of the Categories, Aristotle distinguishes between synonymy and homonymy (later called univocity and multivocity). His preferred ...
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Aristotle: Logic | Internet Encyclopedia of PhilosophyLinguistic fallacies include: homonymy (verbal equivocation), ambiguity (amphiboly or grammatical equivocation), composition (confusing parts with a whole) ...
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HOMONYM Definition & Meaning - Dictionary.comhomonym. First recorded in 1635–45; from Latin homōnymum, from Greek homṓnymon, neuter of homṓnymos homonymous. Discover More. Word History and Origins. Origin ...
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HOMONYM Definition & Meaning - Merriam-WebsterHomonyms may be words with identical pronunciations but different spellings and meanings, such as to, too, and two. Or they may be words with both identical ...Missing: linguistics | Show results with:linguistics
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Aristotle on homonymy - Assets - Cambridge University PressAristotle finds homonymy and synonymy to be concerned not merely with words, but also, and primarily, with things.
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Aristotle on Use of Homonymy in the Rhetoric - ResearchGateAug 6, 2025 · How does Aristotle value homonymy in the Rhetoric? The testimony of the Rhetoric ... Logic and Metaphysics in Some Earlier Works of Aristotle' 163 ...
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Medieval Theories of Analogy - Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyNov 29, 1999 · We should note that equivocal terms include homonyms (two words with the same form but different senses, e.g., 'pen'), polysemous words (one ...
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(PDF) The semantic side of Etymology: Comparative reconstruction ...The etymological or comparative principle, developed in comparative linguistics ... homonymy is exceptional and should not be an accepted explanation until ...
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[PDF] Components and Dimensions of Linguistic SignIt would be improper to see in de Saussure's conception of the linguistic sign, in his ... related to several linguistic signs (polysemy, homonymy).
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[PDF] A Survey on Ambiguity within the Framework of TG Grammar in ...Proposed by Chomsky (1965), transformational-generative grammar sees language as a system of innate rules.' In. Chomsky's view, a native speaker possesses a ...
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Sustained meaning activation for polysemous but not homonymous ...The different meanings of a homonym share a common lexical form by historical accident and accordingly lexicographers list different meanings of homonyms as ...
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Learning new meanings for old words: effects of semantic relatednessMay 22, 2012 · This form of ambiguity between related word senses (polysemy) can be contrasted with homonymy, in which, due to a historical accident, a ...
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[PDF] Why do human languages have homophones? - Cog SciHuman languages are replete with ambiguity. This is most evident in homophony––where two or more words sound the same, but carry distinct meanings.
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[PDF] American English - Dialects and Variation - Northwestern Linguisticspronunciation of the vowels in caught and cot as the same vowel or the pronunciation of the /ai/ in time as [a] (as in tahm), show group-exclusive.
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How does language influence identity? | University of Nevada, RenoFeb 4, 2019 · In the West, it is common for people to pronounce cot and caught as homophones due to the region's lack of a long-a vowel pronunciation.
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A cross-linguistic quantitative study of homophony - ResearchGateOct 18, 2025 · Across longer timescales, one might look to processes like sound change, which are known to generate homophony (Ke, 2006; Sampson, 2013;Sampson, ...
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[PDF] Ambiguity Resolution and the Evolution of Homophones in EnglishThe number of occurrences of words whose lexical categories occur once in each homophonous set is 365 (4.1%) of 8,902 homophones (Ogura & Wang 2006). 4 ...
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[PDF] time and thyme are not homophones - UC Berkeley LinguisticsHomophones are usually defined as sets of words that sound alike. Given that definition, one would expect the duration of a word like thyme to predict the ...
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[PDF] ACCESSING MEANING OF HOMOGRPHS - OhioLINK ETDA homograph is a linguistic term that is defined as a group of words that are spelled the same way, but differ in origin, meaning, and often times, ...
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Lead - Etymology, Origin & Meaning"Lead" originates from Old English: verb from lædan (to guide, from Proto-Germanic *laidjanan), noun from West Germanic *lauda- (metal known for softness, ...Missing: linguistics | Show results with:linguistics
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[PDF] Noun Homograph Disambiguation Using Local Context in Large ...Abstract. This paper describes an accurate, relatively inexpensive method for the disambiguation of noun homographs using large text corpora.Missing: scholarly | Show results with:scholarly
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Heteronyms and polyphones: Categories of words with multiple ...Heteronyms are words that have two different possible pronunciations that are associated with two (or more) different meanings.
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To - Etymology, Origin & Meaning### Etymology of "to" in English
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Too - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOriginating as an early Modern English variant of "to," this word means "in addition; very; more than enough," akin to German "zu" with dual senses.
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Two - Etymology, Origin & MeaningFrom Old English "twa" (feminine/neuter), meaning the number one more than one; "two" denotes the numeral 2 and its symbol.
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Flower - Etymology, Origin & Meaning### Etymology of "flower" in English
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Flour - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOld French flor also meant both "a flower, blossom" and "meal, fine flour." The English word also was spelled flower until flour became the accepted form c.
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Bow - Etymology, Origin & MeaningBow originates from Old English and Proto-Germanic roots meaning "to bend." It means bending the body, a curved weapon for shooting arrows, or the front of a ...
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Wind - Etymology, Origin & MeaningWind originates from Old English and Proto-Germanic roots meaning "blow" (air in motion) and "turn, twist" (move by twisting), combining air movement and ...
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Bat - Etymology, Origin & MeaningBat originates from Old English batt (cudgel) and Old French batte (pestle), meaning a stick or club used for striking; also denotes a flying mammal and the ...
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CLEARPOND: Cross-Linguistic Easy-Access Resource for ...Jul 18, 2012 · For example, the French word mer (sea) is a substitution neighbor of ver (earthworm), vers (towards), vert (green), and verre (drinking glass), ...
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The differences between the French words "vert, vers & ver"Jul 26, 2023 · Vert, vers and ver are three French homonyms with completely different meanings. ... The preposition “vers” has Latin origins, derived from ...
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Perception of Different Tone Contrasts at Sub-Lexical and ... - NIHThe tonal inventory of Mandarin Chinese consists of four lexically contrastive tones. The meaning of the syllable /ma/ can be “mother,” “hemp,” “horse,” and “to ...
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[PDF] Spoken word recognition of Chinese homophones - ISCA ArchiveA cross-modal naming experiment was conducted to examine the effects of context and other lexical information in the processing of Chinese homophones during ...Missing: paper | Show results with:paper
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Lesson 2: Root System | AFB - Arabic For Beginnersthe root k-t-b كَتَبَ carries the meaning 'writing'. Various words are derived from this root, all associated with the idea 'writing' literally or abstractly.
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Understanding Root Patterns in Arabic Morphology– **”k-t-b” (كتب)**: This root relates to writing. – **Kataba (كتب)**: He wrote. – **Kitāb (كتاب)**: Book. – **Maktab (مكتب)**: Office or desk. – **Kātib ...
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[PDF] A Hybrid Morphological Disambiguation System for TurkishOct 18, 2013 · Turkish is an agglutinative language. Agglutina- tive languages ... There are 2052 distinct whole tags, which show the ambiguity problem of ...
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Word Meaning - Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyJun 2, 2015 · Grice's theory of conversation and implicatures was interpreted by many (including Grice himself) as a convincing way of accounting for the ...
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OED terminologyThe order of homographs is determined by date: the earliest homograph is listed first. A homophone is a word which has the same pronunciation as another, but a ...
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Models of Polysemy in Two English Dictionaries - Oxford AcademicFeb 28, 2024 · It is believed that polysemous senses form the same lexical unit, while homonyms are separate lexical units. In this paper we present a novel ...
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The time course of semantic ambiguity in visual word recognitionJul 9, 2024 · Accordingly, semantic ambiguity has been one of the critical issues in the research of psycholinguistics over five decades (for recent ...
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Barking up the right tree: Univariate and multivariate fMRI analyses ...Psycholinguistic studies indicate that when we process homonyms in natural language ... processing associated with recognition and comprehension of the prime word ...2. Method · 3. Results · 4. Discussion<|control11|><|separator|>
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Polysemy—Evidence from Linguistics, Behavioral Science, and ...Mar 1, 2024 · Homonyms are words such as match that can take completely different meanings in different contexts (see, e.g., Weinreich 1964; Lyons 1977; ...
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[PDF] Pun Strategies Across Joke Schemata: A Corpus-Based StudyApr 1, 2018 · ... pun and what is not a pun. Page 21. 13. In discussing wordplay many linguists agree that homonymy is central to the identity of puns (Attardo ...
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[PDF] A computational model of linguistic humor in puns AuthorsWe found no significant differences between identical and near homophone puns in terms of funniness ratings (t(130.91) = 0.13, p = 0.896), ambiguity scores (t( ...Missing: homonyms rhetorical devices
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Appendix I - Indo-European Roots - American Heritage Dictionaryberserker, perhaps from Old Norse björn, bear, from Germanic *bernuz. [Pokorny 5. bher‑ 136.] bherəg- To shine; bright, white. Oldest form *bherh ...
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Bear - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOriginating from Old English "beran" (to carry, give birth) from Proto-Germanic *beranan and PIE *bher- meaning "carry" or "give birth," and Old English ...Missing: homonym | Show results with:homonym