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Meaning of heteronymy | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B2

Definitions

  1. The condition of being heteronyms; the relationship between two words with different meanings and either the same spelling or the same pronunciation but not both.
    countable, uncountable
  2. The unrelatedness of words for items that are related by being members of a single category.
    countable, uncountable
  3. Dissimilarity of people in a single group.
    broadly, countable, uncountable
  4. The use of multiple names for a single person or thing; polyonymy
    countable, uncountable
  5. A single word or symbol that can have different but related meanings.
    countable, uncountable
  6. Resulting from the actions of multiple or external causal agents.
    countable, uncountable

Examples

“We find also the ancient term ārcūbālīstǎ (or with II,) which, with the aid of otosis, elision, and heteronymy, arising out of the varying use and changing shape of the weapon, will account for all the forms cited.”
“The result of combined tautonymy and heteronymy can be either faster or slower replacement of non-American heteronyms, as these two examples demonstrate.”
“Heteronymy in grammar is partial homonymy, as when words have the same sound but different spelling (through, threw).”
“...phenomenon that is here called sex heteronymy, which implies that the two sexes of animals (or human beings, for instance relatives) are referred to by words which are altogether dissimilar as in bull: cow, (aunt: uncle) Deer.”
“The relations listed here are in fact fundamental: the synonymy relation leads to the analysis of an existing vocabulary into classes of equivalent expressions (these can for instance belong to different sub-languages, or domains of use, or be of different degrees of complexity); the hyponymy rleation leads to a hierarchical analysis of the vocabulary (especially in the domain of general names - and depending on this it yields intersecting classifications of adjectives and verbs, according to the usability of adjectives and verbs with particular groups of nouns); the polarity relations lead to an anyalysis of the vocabulary (especially adjectives) according to particular dimensions and intradimensional classifications; only in the case of heteronymy does there normally exist a superordinate concept for the whole domain (also called a supernym).”
“Heteronymy is a matter of more than two expressions. A typical example is the set of terms for the days of the week, the set of basic colour terms (for more on colour terms, see 10.4) or terms for kinds of animals, plants, vehicles, etc.”
“Differentiation simply increases, on a grander scale, the heteronymy and chaos that are the historical attribute of this society.”
“The highest value of total consanguinity based on random isonymy is observed in Sanabria, which also has the lowest values of heteronymy and the highest intra-population a priori kinship.”
“German dialects show a great deal of heteronymy for spring and autumn, English ones mainly for autumn. This is surprising in view of the fact that historically the English terms for 'spring' show greater heteronymy than those for 'autumn'.”
“The self-abnegating state of shame proves to be allied with another of the key figures of Agamben's discourse: heteronymy. This notion is understood here in the sense of characters and fictional authors functioning as alter egos of the author or narrator: the multiple names are seen as referring to a single subject.”
“Cases (3) and (4) you might call heteronymies, case (3) being heteronymy in the special sense and case (4) polyonymy.”
“Heteronymies, or propositions false in S by virtue of the meanings of the terms entering in them.”
“An intensional 'enrichment' of logical language, on the other hand, which might succeed in matching the endogenic heteronymies of ordinary language, can do so only at the price of semantic transparency.”
“The Me is plural, unstable, as Pessoa very well demonstrated; there are Mes of distinct heteronymies (Dos Santos Jorge 2005).”
“If we are to define emotion as distinctly representative in character, must we not ascribe emotion to all the lower animal forms only by heteronymy ?”
“Is it passional or rational; is it religious, or legal and social; is it moral heteronymy or moral autonomy; is it moral result or moral intention; is it the authority of self or that of church or of state ?”
“Heteronymy itself, construed as a dispositif for thinking, rather than as a subjective drama, directs the composition of an ideal place of sorts in which the correlations and disjunctions of the figures evoke the relationships among the "supreme genera" (or kinds) in Plato's Sophist.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.

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