Nyms – English is a curious language

‘Nyms’

English is a curious, complex and crazy language. Not least of which are the -nyms.

You may use these in everyday language and not give a second thought, unless you’re like me – a wordsmith and amateur etymologist – and such curiosities intrigue you.

Many of us have heard the term ‘Synonym’ – but what does it mean?

Synonym

a word or phrase that means exactly or nearly the same as another word or phrase in the same language, for example shut is a synonym of close.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synonym

Examples:

Shut/Close*

Far/Distant

Evil/Wicked/Bad/Malevolent

Push/Shove

Jump/Leap

Create/Make

Near/Close*

*See examples below as Close (as in near) and Close (as in close a door) are also Homonyms.

It’s likely you’ve used homonyms regularly but might not have been aware that’s what they were called.

What is a Homonym?

This is more complex – as there are several linguist concepts related to homonyms.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homonym

Homographs -words that share the same spelling – regardless of meaning.

Desert (arid region) and desert (to leave)

Bark(the covering on a tree) and bark (the sound a dog makes) * This is also a homonym (as it sounds the same)

Lime (the fruit) and lime (the chemical/material)

Rose (the flower) and rose (to travel upwards)

Tear (to rip) and tear (a drop of moisture from the eye)

Heterophones – words that share the same spelling but are pronounced differently.

Examples:

Bow (as in bow tie, or violin bow or the weapon) and bow (as in bow of a ship or take a bow) * These are also Heteronyms as they pronounced differently.

Row (as in row a boat or stand in a row) and row (as in argue with one’s spouse) *Also a Heteronym.

Homophones – words that sound the same – regardless of spelling.

Examples:

Threw (as in threw a ball)/through (to pass through something)

To (the place – go to somewhere)/Two (the number/amount)/Too (also – I want to come too)

Their (Possessive – Their house, their dog etc/There (location – there is the house, there is the dog)/They’re (contract of they are).

For (the ball is for Alex, the knife is for cutting) /Four (the number)/Fore (the front part/golfing term).

Wind (the wind is blowing today)/wind (to wind up a watch) or windy – it is windy today/this road winds around the village.

Antonym – Words with opposite meaning

Examples:

Add/Subtract

Happy/Sad

Open/Close

Lie/Truth

Contronym (also known as a Janus word) a word having two meanings that  contradict  one another (also contranym)

– Merrium Webster definition   called also antagonym, autoantonym, Janus word

(Janus was the Roman god of doorways and portals – he was the chap with two faces).

Examples:

Aught – all or nothing,

Cleave – to separate and to join together,

Buckle – to fasten or secure and to bend/warp under pressure,

Dust (verb)– to sprinkle with fine particles (such as dust a cake), or to remove fine particles (to dust a shelf),

Overlook – to fail to see something, or to monitor or inspect,

Fine – excellent or just good enough,

Sanction – to approve or boycott.

For further examples – check here https://www.dailywritingtips.com/75-contronyms-words-with-contradictory-meanings/

Capitonyms

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitonym

Words that have the same spelling but different meanings if one is capitalised

Polish (from Poland)/polish (to shine something) and Pole (citizen of Poland)/pole (a long piece of wood or metal)

March (the month)/march (walk in step or border territory).

August (the month)/august (respected)

Turkey (the country)/turkey (the bird consumed at Christmas)

Scotch (from Scotland)/scotch (the drink or to scotch a rumour)

Frank (the name)/frank (honesty or to postmark a letter)

Slough (the place)/slough (to shed the skin)

Mass (the religious gathering)/mass (a large object/gathering)

75 Contronyms (Words with Contradictory Meanings)

https://www.grammarly.com/blog/10-verbs-contronyms/

Confused? I’m not surprised.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on November 06, 2023 03:26
No comments have been added yet.