Linguistics: Monosemy
A monosemic word is a subgroup under homograph, both of which come under the homonym umbrella. A monosemy is one word with ONLY one meaning and sounds the same, obviously!
A monosemic word is a subgroup under homograph, both of which come under the homonym umbrella. A monosemy is one word with ONLY one meaning and sounds the same, obviously!
A polysemic word is a subgroup under homograph, both of which come under the homonym umbrella. Polysemies are spelled the same and share the same root word and may or may not sound the same.
Figuratively speaking, self-editing writers may want to literally get their hands on a red pen and start editing away in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
The tenor of this Word Confusion from KD Did It is all about the tenner.
In light of new information about eggs, you can safely go back to this breakfast treat, but in lieu of bacon and home fries, try salsa instead in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
You can copy right, copyright, or be a copywriter doing some copywriting in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
An extremely little-known bit of word play— the heterograph — that is more specific than the homophone in this Linguistics post from KD Did It.
Made up by the maid or maid up by the made? You decide in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Later you can explore the earlier Word Confusion post on “Former versus Latter”…once you climb down the ladder of this exploration of ladder vs later vs latter from KD Did It.
When one encounters the latter, it can be useful to track back to the former to understand how it came about in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.