1. Onomasiology definition is - the study of words and expressions having similar or associated concepts and a basis (as social, regional, occupational) for being grouped.
Onomasiology, Of, Or, Occupational
2. Onomasiology (uncountable) (linguistics) A branch of lexicology concerned with the names of concepts.
Onomasiology, Of
3. Onomasiology is a branch of linguistics concerned with the question "how do you express X?" It is in fact most commonly understood as a branch of lexicology, the study of words
Onomasiology, Of
4. Onomasiology, as a part of lexicology, starts from a concept which is taken to be prior and asks for its names.
Onomasiology, Of
5. Lexemic Change: How, Why, What For? A Contribution to English and General Onomasiology]
Onomasiology
6. Onomasiology is “the study of designations, where the linguist starts with an extralinguistic concept and looks for its formal verbalizations.” (Grzega 2012:271) Semasiology, on t he other hand,
Onomasiology, Of, On, Other
7. It is the opposite of Onomasiology, a branch of lexicology that starts with a concept or object and asks for its name, i.e., "how do you express X?"
Opposite, Of, Onomasiology, Or, Object
8. Onomasiology definition: the branch of semantics concerned with the meanings of and meaning relations between Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
Onomasiology, Of
9. Semasiology and Onomasiology: Empirical questions between meaning, naming and context
Onomasiology
10. What does Onomasiology mean? A branch of lexicology concerned with the names of concepts
Onomasiology, Of
11. Onomasiology: study of nomenclature onomastic: of, like or pertaining to a name or signature onomasticon: dictionary of proper names onomastics: study of proper names onomatomania: irresistible desire to repeat certain words onomatophobia: fear of hearing a certain word onomatous: bearing the author's name ontal
Onomasiology, Of, Onomastic, Or, Onomasticon, Onomastics, Onomatomania, Onomatophobia, Onomatous, Ontal
12. Is that semasiology is (linguistics) a discipline within linguistics concerned with the meaning of a word independent of its phonetic expression while Onomasiology is a branch of lexicology concerned with the names of concepts
Of, Onomasiology
13. Onomasiology) Coordinate terms
Onomasiology
14. Onomasiology (from Greek: ὀνομάζω (onomāzο) — to name, which in turn is from ὄνομα — name) is a branch of linguistics concerned with the question "how do you express X?" It is in fact most commonly understood as a branch of lexicology, the study of words (although some apply the term also to grammar and conversation).
Onomasiology, Onom, Of
15. Onomasiology, as a part of lexicology, starts from a
Onomasiology, Of
16. Both Onomasiology and semasiology study the relationship between words and their semantic values
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17. Onomasiology comes from the Greek ónoma (name) and logos (study)
Onomasiology
18. It seems to be the product of a publisher's decision that such a book should be on every well-rounded reference list, but as a work viewed in the larger context of Onomasiology, it breaks no new ground as far as I can tell and offers nothing not already covered by the works of Leslie A
Of, On, Onomasiology, Offers
19. Onomasiology starts with the concept and asks, ‘How do I express [the concept]?’ Semasiology works the other direction, starting with the word and ask, ‘What does [the word] mean?’ Linguists care about these things
Onomasiology, Other
20. What does onomasiological mean? Of or pertaining to Onomasiology
Onomasiological, Of, Or, Onomasiology
21. Onomasiology - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums
Onomasiology
22. Onomasiology, Topology of first-person experience (FPE) Towards an ontology based on Hallig-Wartburg's Begriffssystem for Historical Linguistic Linked Data To empower end users in searching for historical linguistic content with a performance that far exceeds the research functions offered by websites of, e.g., historical dictionaries, is
Onomasiology, Of, Ontology, On, Offered
23. Onomasiology definition: the branch of semantics concerned with the meanings of and meaning relations between Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
Onomasiology, Of
24. Using the methodology of diachronic cognitive Onomasiology, as developed in two projects at Tübingen University, the study discusses polygenetic semantic parallels in semantic change, focussing on those that are due to fundamental cognitive constants
Of, Onomasiology, On
25. Onomasiology (from Greek: ὀνομάζω (onomāzο) — to name, which in turn is from ὄνομα — name) is a branch of linguistics concerned with the question "how do you express X?" It is in fact most commonly understood as a branch of lexicology, the study of words (although some apply the term also to grammar and conversation).
Onomasiology, Onom, Of
26. Onomasiology, as a part of lexicology, starts from a
Onomasiology, Of
27. Translation for 'Onomasiology' in the free English-Polish dictionary and many other Polish translations.
Onomasiology, Other
28. The current study must be framed within the discipline of applied and historical linguistics and historical Onomasiology
Of, Onomasiology
29. We've got 0 rhyming words for Onomasiology » What rhymes with Onomasiology? This page is about the various possible words that rhymes or sounds like Onomasiology.Use it for writing poetry, composing lyrics for your song or coming up with rap verses.
Onomasiology, Or
30. Onomasiology (uncountable) (linguistics) A branch of lexicology concerned with the names of concepts
Onomasiology, Of
31. Onomasiology is “the study of designations, where the linguist starts with an extralinguistic concept and looks for its formal verbalizations.” (Grzega 2012:271) Semasiology, on t he other hand,
Onomasiology, Of, On, Other
32. Onomasiology is the branch of linguistics concerned with "how do you express X?"
Onomasiology, Of
33. The term Onomasiology was coined almost one hundred years ago by the German linguist Adolf Zauner in his dissertation on body-part terminology in Romance languages (1902)
Onomasiology, One, On
34. Although Grimm (1848) had already applied similar methods, Onomasiology proper did not begin before Diez (1875), Tappolet (1895), Zauner (1902), and Merlo (1904).
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35. Onomasiology unsuggestiveness lacunaria brass-shapen spiracula coextension
Onomasiology
36. Onomasiology Online (revista e bibliografia, editores: Joachim Grzega, Alfred Bammesberger, Marion Schöner) Material para os cursos universitários (inglês e liguas em geral): English and General Historical Lexicology (de Joachim Grzega e Marion Schöner)
Onomasiology, Online, Os
37. Towards the basic principles of cognitive Onomasiology The distinction between Onomasiology and semasiology is a traditional one in Continental structural semantics, but it has hardly found its way into the canonical English terminology of linguistics; it does not appear, for in-stance, in most standard textbooks of linguistics.
Of, Onomasiology, One
ONOMASIOLOGY [ˌänəˌmāsēˈäləjē, ˌänəˌmāzēˈäləjē, ˌônəˌmāsēˈäləjē, ˌônəˌmāzēˈäləjē]
NOUN
onomasiology (noun)
Onomasiology (from Greek: ὀνομάζω (onomāzο)—to name, which in turn is from ὄνομα—name) is a branch of linguistics concerned with the question "how do you express X?". It is in fact most commonly understood as a branch of lexicology, the study of words (although some apply the term also to grammar and conversation).
whereas semasiology starts with a word and asks for its meanings. The exact meaning of semasiology is somewhat obscure. It is often used as a synonym of semantics (the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and longer forms of expression).
It is often used as a synonym of semantics (the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and longer forms of expression). However, semasiology is also sometimes considered part of lexical semantics, a narrow subfield of lexicology (the study of words) and semantics.