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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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The <strong>Oxford</strong> <strong>Thesaurus</strong><br />

An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms<br />

INTRO Introduction<br />

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-<br />

In its narrowest sense, a synonym is a word or phrase that is perfectly<br />

substitutable in a context for another word or phrase. People who study<br />

language professionally agree that there is no such thing as an ideal<br />

synonym, for it is virtually impossible to find two words or phrases that<br />

are identical in denotation (meaning), connotation, frequency,<br />

familiarity, and appropriateness. Indeed, linguists have long noted the<br />

economy of language, which suggests that no language permits a perfect<br />

fit, in all respects, between any two words or phrases. Many examples of<br />

overlapping can be cited; the more obvious ones in English are those that<br />

reflect a duplication arising from Germanic and Romance sources, like<br />

motherly and maternal, farming and agriculture, teach and instruct. In<br />

such pairs the native English form is often the one with an earthier,<br />

warmer connotation. In some instances, where a new coinage or a loanword<br />

has been adopted inadvertently duplicating an existing term, creating<br />

'true' synonyms, the two will quickly diverge, not necessarily in meaning<br />

but in usage, application, connotation, level, or all of these. For<br />

example, scientists some years ago expressed dissatisfaction with the term<br />

tidal wave, for the phenomenon was not caused by tides but, usually, by<br />

submarine seismic activity. The word tsunami was borrowed from Japanese in<br />

an attempt to describe the phenomenon more accurately, but it was later<br />

pointed out the tsunami means 'tidal wave' in Japanese. Today, the terms<br />

exist side by side in English, the older expression still in common use,<br />

the newer more frequent in the scientific and technical literature.<br />

Any synonym book must be seen as a compromise that relies on the<br />

sensitivity of its users to the idiomatic nuances of the language. In its<br />

best applications, it serves to remind users of words, similar in meaning,<br />

that might not spring readily to mind, and to offer lists of words and<br />

phrases that are alternatives to and compromises for those that might<br />

otherwise be overused and therefore redundant, repetitious, and boring.<br />

The <strong>Oxford</strong> <strong>Thesaurus</strong> goes a step further by offering example sentences to<br />

illustrate the uses of the headwords and their alternatives in natural,<br />

idiomatic contexts.<br />

1. Selection of headwords

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