- This article deals with the general meaning of the term
"synonym". For biological synonyms, see Synonym
(taxonomy).
Synonyms are different words with identical or
at least 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 ("syn") "with" and ("onomathe words car and automobile.
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:
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,
phonic qualities, ambiguous
meanings, usage, etc. make them unique. However, many people feel
that the synonyms they use are identical in meaning for all
practical purposes, and are interchangeable. 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, such as a long arm and 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.
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."1
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.
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.
synonymy in Afrikaans: Sinoniem
synonymy in Bavarian: Synonym
synonymy in Bulgarian: Синоним
synonymy in Catalan: Sinònim
synonymy in Chuvash: Синонимсем
synonymy in Czech: Synonymum
synonymy in Welsh: Cyfystyr
synonymy in Danish: Synonym
synonymy in German: Synonymie
synonymy in Estonian: Sünonüüm
synonymy in Spanish: Sinónimo
synonymy in Esperanto: Sinonimo
synonymy in Basque: Sinonimo
synonymy in Faroese: Samheiti
synonymy in French: Synonymie
synonymy in Galician: Sinonimia
synonymy in Korean: 동의어
synonymy in Croatian: Sinonim
synonymy in Ido: Sinonimo
synonymy in Indonesian: Sinonim
synonymy in Icelandic: Samheiti
synonymy in Italian: Sinonimia
synonymy in Hebrew: מילה נרדפת
synonymy in Georgian: სინონიმი
synonymy in Latvian: Sinonīms
synonymy in Luxembourgish: Synonymie
synonymy in Lithuanian: Sinonimas
synonymy in Hungarian: Szinonímia
synonymy in Macedonian: Синоним
synonymy in Dutch: Synoniem (taalkunde)
synonymy in Japanese: 類義語
synonymy in Norwegian: Synonym
synonymy in Polish: Synonim
synonymy in Portuguese: Sinônimo
synonymy in Romanian: Sinonim
synonymy in Quechua: Kaqlla simi
synonymy in Russian: Синонимы
synonymy in Albanian: Sinonimi
synonymy in Simple English: Synonym
synonymy in Slovak: Synonymum
synonymy in Slovenian: Sopomenka
synonymy in Serbian: Синоним
synonymy in Serbo-Croatian: Sinonim
synonymy in Finnish: Synonymia
synonymy in Swedish: Synonym
synonymy in Turkish: Sinonim
synonymy in Ukrainian: Синонім
synonymy in Walloon: Sinonimeye
synonymy in Chinese: 同义词
agreement, biographical
dictionary, chemical dictionary,
coequality,
coincidence,
congruence,
correspondence, desk
dictionary, dialect dictionary,
dictionary, dictionary of
quotations, electronics dictionary,
equality,
equivalence, etymological
dictionary, foreign-language dictionary,
gazetteer, general dictionary,
geological dictionary,
gloss,
glossary,
gradus,
homogeneity,
homoousia,
identity,
indistinguishability,
lexicon, no difference,
nomenclator,
oneness,
onomasticon, phrase book,
polyglot dictionary, rhyming dictionary,
sameness, science dictionary,
self-identity,
selfhood,
selfness,
selfsameness, slang
dictionary, specialized dictionary, synonym dictionary,
synonymity,
synonymousness,
thesaurus, treasury of words,
unabridged dictionary,
unity,
vocabulary,
wordbook