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I have always thought that startlement is a word in the lexicon But one day when I was writing in a google doc, I saw it underlined like a typo I googled it to see if it was indeed a word, or a
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I'm confused, What is the lexical relationship between "Monday" and "Tuesday"? I mean is the relationship hyponymy, prototypes, polysemy, homophones, metonymy etc?
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What is the difference between the words vernacular and colloquial? Is vernacular closer to jargon? A quick search reveals that colloquial refers to informal spoken language while vernacular refer
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Some say the lexicon is inherent to a language (objective) while a vocabulary is only relative to a (group of) person (s) (subjective) Wikipedia says the lexicon is the vocabulary of a language Dictionary should be an easy one, it's a mapping, either between languages or between words and word sense definitions
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What one word, and it can be borrowed from another language, so long as it has been definitively accepted into the lexicon of English, describes something that is simultaneously spicy and sweet?
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Most dictionaries do not include this term, although "immeasurable" is included However, I feel that "immeasurable" implies that something was so large or great that numbers could not be applied to it (e g immeasurable loss damage wealth) Is "unmeasurable" a term that I should add to my own lexicon?
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A lexicon is just a catalog or dictionary of terms Terminology is the set of specialized terms in my field of study These items are clearly understood by others in my field of study Jargon is a set of terms used by people in other fields of study These terms are confusing, ambiguous and frustrating
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