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English-Thai Dictionary

synonymous

ADJ มีความหมาย เหมือนกัน  มีความหมาย แบบ เดียวกัน  equivalent similar parallel contrary conflicting me-kwam-mai-muan-kan

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

SYNONYMOUS

a.Expressing the same thing; conveying the same idea. We rarely find two words precisely synonymous. Wave and billow are sometimes synonymous, but not always. When we speak of the large rolling swell of the sea, we may call it a wave or a billow; but when we speak of the small swell of a pond, we may call it a wave, but we may not call it a billow.

 

SYNONYMOUSLY

adv. In a synonymous manner; in the same sense; with the same meaning. Two words may be used synonymously in some cases and not in others.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

SYNONYMOUS

Syn *on "y *mous, a. Etym: [Gr. Syn-, and Name. ]

 

Defn: Having the character of a synonym; expressing the same thing; conveying the same, or approximately the same, idea. -- Syn *on "y *mous *ly, adv. These words consist of two propositions, which are not distinct in sense, but one and the same thing variously expressed; for wisdom and understanding are synonymous words here. Tillotson.

 

Syn. -- Identical; interchangeable. -- Synonymous, Identical. If no words are synonymous except those which are identical in use and meaning, so that the one can in all cases be substituted for the other, we have scarcely ten such words in our language. But the term more properly denotes that the words in question approach so near to each other, that, in many or most cases, they can be used interchangeably. 1. Words may thus coincide in certain connections, and so be interchanged, when they can not be interchanged in other connections; thus we may speak either strength of mind or of force of mind, but we say the force (not strength ) of gravitation. 2. Two words may differ slightly, but this difference may be unimportant to the speaker's object, so that he may freely interchange them; thus it makes but little difference, in most cases, whether we speak of a man's having secured his object or having attained his object. For these and other causes we have numerous words which may, in many cases or connections, be used interchangeably, and these are properly called synonyms. Synonymous words "are words which, with great and essential resemblances of meaning, have, at the same time, small, subordinate, and partial differences, -- these differences being such as either originally and on the ground of their etymology inhered in them; or differences which they have by usage acquired in the eyes of all; or such as, though nearly latent now, they are capable of receiving at the hands of wise and discreet masters of the tongue. Synonyms are words of like significance in the main, but with a certain unlikeness as well. " Trench.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

synonymous

syn on y mous |səˈnänəməs səˈnɑnəməs | adjective (of a word or phrase ) having the same or nearly the same meaning as another word or phrase in the same language: aggression is often taken as synonymous with violence. closely associated with or suggestive of something: his deeds had made his name synonymous with victory. DERIVATIVES syn on y mous ly adverb, syn on y mous ness noun

 

Oxford Dictionary

synonymous

synonymous |sɪˈnɒnɪməs | adjective 1 (of a word or phrase ) having the same meaning as another word or phrase in the same language. 2 closely associated with or suggestive of something: his deeds had made his name synonymous with victory. DERIVATIVES synonymously adverb, synonymousness noun

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

synonymous

syn on y mous /sɪnɑ́nəməs |-nɔ́n -/形容詞 «…と » 同意の, 類義の «with » .