e
ea
eb
ec
ed
ee
ef
eg
eh
ei
ej
ek
el
em
en
eo
ep
eq
er
es
et
eu
ev
ew
ex
ey
Перевод: etymological
[прилагательное] этимологический
Тезаурус:
- That Miller was known outside the gardening fraternity at the time is evidenced by the fact that his expertise was sought by Nathan Bailey for his Dictionarum Britannicum or a more Compleat Etymological English Dictionary , 1730.
- For example, using a good etymological dictionary, try looking up the origins and spelling changes in words like: ache delight ghost guest health (and whole, hale) island thought Changes in place names are particularly interesting, because they demonstrate clearly the way in which spelling does not determine pronunciation, but so often limps along behind.
- The committee recognised that there was increasing use of the "f" spelling in English publications and that there was no good etymological basis for preferring the "ph" spelling.
- Children do see words as natural objects, and the non-semantic associations Valerie Yule disapproves of (" visual, phonic, contextual, etymological, and so on") are the key to the child's interest in them.
- Half felt the error was so common that they voted to give up its etymological origin - "to become public".
- It is a tautology to say that English spelling is excellent because the reader can Jump around for clues on so many different levels (semantic, visual, phonic, contextual, etymological, and so on).
- Honeymoon , by the way, just in case you can't cut the etymological mustard, has only in recent times come to denote a nuptial holiday involving the purchase of duty-free goods and the taking of too many colour prints of exactly the same scene.
- The French government has just approved a whole range of radical spelling changes, proposed by the government-appointed Conseil Suprieur de la Langue Franaise, which will deform some of the most familiar French words, obfuscate their etymological origins and massacre many an adopted foreign word.
- In modern English, moral and mental conditions are spoken of in more or less abstract terms (anger, suspicion, forcefulness and so on) cut off for the most part, from their etymological roots
- The word organic is being used in two different ways - but with the same etymological root.
- The etymological connection between "pure", "purge" and "purgatory" becomes clear when the word is understood in this context.
- A number of feminists - Mary Daly is a good example - find it useful to subject words to a kind of archaeological excavation, turning to the etymological dictionaries to find out where a particular word came from, what it meant and how it has changed.
- He agreed this name might be in error, but by convoluted etymological detective work he felt he had established a link between the Saxon word for a cleared strip of land and his lines.
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|