Today's Word Brought to You By | |
|
|
Monosemy | |
noun | 1. The property of having only one meaning. |
|
|
|
| "I'll be presenting a paper on the difficulties of translating monosemy and polysemy in ancient texts at the conference." | "We're taking a monosemy approach for the first round of research." | "The artificial language is built on a monosemy structure." |
|
|
| Today's Word Brought to You By | | Your Security, Your Way | Discover a new era of security with Lorex's 4K Video Doorbell. With a 9:16 aspect ratio, color night vision, and smart motion detection, this doorbell is the epitome of innovation. Additionally, the doorbell records footage locally for complete privacy and zero monthly fees. It can also record 24/7 if you connect it to a Lorex Fusion Recorder, along with other wired and Wi-Fi cameras. | |
|
|
| Greek, 1950s |
|
|
| Unless you're a linguist or a computer scientist, the chances of you using the word "monosemy" in conversation are slim, but it's still an interesting concept to understand. In linguistics, monosemy is when a word or a part of a word has only one meaning. ... | |
|
|
| Do you remember these words? |
|
|
Thank you for supporting our advertisers. |
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment