Word Meaning Example; Bark: 1) Noise made by a dog 2) Outer cover of tree - Some dogs bark a lot. - Cork comes from the bark of a tree. Cell: 1) Part of an organism 2) A room in a prison 3) Unit of a political body 4) Area of radio coverage - The body is composed of millions of cells. - The prisoners were kept in separate cells.

JosĂ© is in his third and final week with me on a home stay full immersion course and has come to the conclusion that the English Language is extremely confusing and frustrating! Especially when it comes to all those words that have multiple meanings. I have to confess that he has got a point. Take the word 'run' for example. It has 179 meanings according to Dictionary.com whilst the word While a monosemous word form has only one meaning, a homonymous word form is associated with two or several unrelated meanings (e.g., coach: ‘bus’, ‘sports instructor’), and is standardly viewed as involving different lexemes (e.g., COACH 1, COACH 2).
The words may be similar due to them coming from the same language family or due to loan words. In some cases they are ”false friends” meaning the words stand for something else from what you know. In English “to use the voice,” means to say something “aloud.”. In Dutch, aloud means “ancient”. The English word “angel” means
1. Dunce. Duns was known as “Doctor Subtilis” because of the subtlety of his thinking. The origins of this derogatory word for someone considered incapable of learning (the opposite of a “bright” student) are surprisingly old, dating to the time of one John Duns Scotus, who was born around 1266 and died in 1308. English Vocabulary List, 500 new words with meaning and sentences 1. About: Using when talking about a topic or something. 2. Location: A place where we have been or described. 3. Grass: Green areas, usually in gardens and parks. 4. Basketball: A kind of sport played by two teams and trying to circulate a ball belonging to the game. 5. Plan: Organizing, planning about a situation or event. 6 There are many English words that are spelled the same but pronounced differently. Such words are called heteronyms (more loosely also homographs, but homographs can also be pronounced the same; they just mean different things). The widest class of heteronyms are words that change their meaning depending on where the stress is placed. In this rmaRV.
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  • english words with two meanings