- smell", even
though there is no "to emit a
smell that isn't bad" hyponym.
Hyperonym and
hypernym mean the same thing, with both in use by linguists. The form...
- (classes): see Type–token distinction. To
summarize the relations,
there are:
hyperonym–hyponym (supertype/superclass–subtype/subclass)
relations between types...
- for
which there are more
traditional words formed with the full -onym (
hyperonym and charactonym). The
English suffix -onym is from the
Ancient Gr**** suffix...
- autonym, caconym, cryptonym, eponym, eponymous, eponymy, euonym, homonym,
hyperonym, hyponym, hyponymy, meronym, meronymy, metonym, metonymy, metronymic,...
- Altered, and
Appropriated Photographs.
Today the term is
often used as a
hyperonym for such picture-making (as
opposed to picture-taking)
concepts as fabricated...
- autonym, caconym, cryptonym, eponym, eponymous, eponymy, euonym, homonym,
hyperonym, hyponym, hyponymy, meronym, meronymy, metonym, metonymy, metronymic,...
-
juxtaposition and suffixation. The
gender can be
expressed by
suffixation or by a
hyperonym, and
while Kanoê does not make a
distinction of number, it does make a...
-
considering alternative definitions for
terms as well as “synonyms, hyponyms,
hyperonyms, meronyms, holonyms, and antonyms.”"
Cloem can
optionally publish one...
- part, has
compared some of the
procedures used by
Abeille (practice of
hyperonyms,
fictional mise en abyme, etc.) to
those used by
Antoine Volodine, and...