Antonym
Antonyms, from the Greek anti ("against") and onoma ("name") are word pairs that are opposite in meaning, such as hot and cold, fat and thin, and up and down. Words may have different antonyms, depending on the meaning. Both long and tall are antonyms of short. Antonyms are of three types: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Although the word antonym was only coined by philologists in the 19th century, such relationships are a fundamental part of a language, in contrast to synonyms, which are a result of history and drawing of fine distinctions, or homonyms, which are mostly etymological accidents or coincidences. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
\n\");}
//-->
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ A few words with two antonymous meanings may also be designated contronyms, occasionally spelled contranyms: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Philologist: REDIRECT Philology... 19th century: :Alternative meaning: Nineteenth Century (periodical)... Synonym: Synonyms (in ancient Greek syn 'συν' = plus and onoma 'όνομα' = name) are different words with similar or identical meanings. Antonyms are words with opposite or nearly opposite meanings. (Synonym and antonym are antonyms.)... | ~ Table of Content ~
\n\");}
//-->
~ Related Subjects ~Etymological (1) - Greek (1) - Antonyms (1) - Homonym (1) - Philologist (1) - 19th century (1) - Synonym (1) -~ Community ~
| ||||||||||||||
Lexicon - Contact us/Report abuse - Privacy Policy - Spiritus-Temporis.com ©2005. - stvers1 - 2012-02-11 - evol2 - 0.35