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Synonym

:''This article deals with the general meaning of the term "synonym". For biological synonyms, see Synonym (taxonomy).''
Synonyms are different words with identical or very similar meanings. Words that are synonyms are said to be '''synonymous''', and the state of being a synonym is called '''synonymy'''. The word comes from Ancient Greek language|Ancient Greek ("''syn''") "with" and ("''onoma''") "name". The words ''car'' and ''automobile'' are synonyms. Similarly, if we talk about a ''long time'' or an ''extended time'', ''long'' and ''extended'' become synonyms. In the figurative sense, two words are often said to be synonymous if they have the same connotation:
- "a widespread impression that … Hollywood was synonymous with immorality" (Doris Kearns Goodwin) Synonyms can be any part of speech (e.g. nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs or prepositions), as long as both members of the pair are the same part of speech. More examples of English synonyms are:
- ''baby'' and ''infant'' (noun)
- ''petty crime'' and ''misdemeanor'' (noun)
- ''student'' and ''pupil'' (noun)
- ''buy'' and ''purchase'' (verb)
- ''pretty'' and ''attractive'' (adjective)
- ''sick'' and ''ill'' (adjective)
- ''quickly'' and ''speedily'' (adverb)
- ''on'' and ''upon'' (preposition)
- ''freedom'' and ''liberty'' (noun)
- ''dead'' and ''deceased'' (adjective)
- ''cop '' and '' police officer'' (noun)
- ''movie'' and '' film'' (noun) Note that the synonyms are defined with respect to certain senses of words; for instance, ''pupil'' as the ''"aperture in the iris of the eye"'' is not synonymous with ''student''. Similarly, ''expired'' as ''"having lost validity"'' (as in grocery goods) doesn't necessarily mean death. In English many synonyms evolved from a mixture of Norman French and English words, often with some words associated with the Saxon countryside (''"folk"'', ''"freedom"'') and synonyms with the Norman nobility (''"people"'', ''"liberty"''). Some lexicographers claim that no synonyms have exactly the same meaning (in all contexts or social levels of language) because etymology, orthography, Phonetics|phonic qualities, ambiguous meanings, usage, etc. make them unique. Different words that are similar in meaning usually differ for a reason: ''feline'' is more formal than ''cat''; ''long'' and ''extended'' are only synonyms in one usage and not in others (for example, a ''long arm'' is not the same as an ''extended arm''). Synonyms are also a source of euphemisms. The purpose of a thesaurus is to offer the user a listing of similar or related words; these are often, but not always, synonyms.

"...there is no such thing as a true synonym."

The use of a human natural language is a matter of agreement between people and names of things (words) are arbitrarily given to objects. Such names are meant to identify things, etc. and are therefore unique identifiers at the start, though may be longer than a single word. Hence you need disambiguation in defining the meaning of Wikipedia entry words too. So what you have is a list of words that may replace each other subject to various contextual circumstances. "Those who work with language know that there is no such thing as a true synonym. Even though the meanings of two words may be the same - or nearly so - there are three characteristics of words that almost never coincide: frequency, distribution and connotation." This is well reflected in various new English dictionaries where you find frequency data next to a dictionary entry, etc. One of the major achievements in lexicography belongs to a Hungarian translator Tibor Bartos, who compiled his Magyar szótár by claiming the very same idea as above. Laurence Urdang in the Introduction to The Synonym Finder, (1979 Rodale Press, ISBN 0-87857-243-0) "...There is no such thing as a true synonym."

Related terms


Antonyms are words with opposite or nearly opposite meanings. For example:
- ''short'' and ''tall''
- ''dead'' and ''alive''
- ''near'' and ''far''
- ''war'' and ''peace''
- ''increase and decrease'' The words ''synonym'' and ''antonym'' are themselves antonyms.
Hypernyms and '''hyponyms''' are words that refer to, respectively, a general category and a specific instance of that category. For example, ''vehicle'' is a hypernym of ''car'', and ''car'' is a hyponym of ''vehicle''.
Homonyms are words that sound or are spelled the same, but have different meanings.

See also


- -onym
- Synonym ring
- Thesaurus

External links


- Synonyms at Synonyms.Me
- Synonyms.net - Online synonyms thesaurus reference resource that also provides images for search terms.
- Synomizer! - supports word and a unique text analysis in five languages.
- Thesaurus - Online synonyms in English, Italian, French and German.
- Free Online English Thesaurus and Dictionary. Free Online English Thesaurus and dictionary containing synonyms, related Words, antonyms, definitions, idioms, words and terms using Merriam Websters Thesaurus, Wordnet Reference and Roget's Thesaurus Definitions.
- Synonym tool for websites - creates lists of synonyms for arbitrary page on WWW
- English Synonym Dictionary - offers 500 searches for synonym per user per day
- Russian Synonym Dictionary - Over 250 000 synonyms
- Synonym Thesaurus
- Synonyms - Over 100 000 synonyms
- French synonyms
- iGoogle Gadget - Synonym Gadget for iGoogle
- English synonyms
- Synonym, thesaurus - Complete thesaurus database (more than 140 thousand words and phrases, more than 1 milion relations) It is the first system to help find all possible varieties of searched words. It is also the first system, which automatically turns the entire text, not only a single word. Category:Lexical semantics Category:Types of words simple:Synonym

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