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Since synonymy is a linguistic phenomenon, it must be defined with the help of
linguistic terms. The term ‘concept’ makes the definition sound rather
extralinguistic.
R. Aldington in his book
Death of a Hero
picked out a group of
synonyms masterly to describe the situation of soldiers
- survivors after an
unsuccessful battle:
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“ … The Frontshires [name of battalion]
straggered
rather than
walked
down the bumpy trench … About fifty men, the flotsam of the wrecked
battalion,
stumbled
past them …. They
shambled
heavily along, no keeping step
or attempting to, bent wearily forward under the weight of their equipment, their
unseeing eyes turned to the muddy ground.”
In this extract we can find three synonymic verbs expression movement.
Thus, the verb
to walk
is used with its three synonyms, each of which describes
the process of walking in its own way. In contrast
to walk
the other three words
do not only carry the bare idea of going on foot but also three different manners
of walking are attached to them. Let’s see the distinguishing meanings of each
synonym separately.
Stagger
means “to sway while walking” and, also, implies
a considerable, sometimes painful, effort.
Stumble
means “to walk tripping over
uneven ground and nearly falling.”
Shamble
implies dragging one’s
feet while
walking; a physical effort is also meant by the word.
With the help of synonyms the author created a vivid picture of the
exhausted, broken men marching from the battle field and enhances the general
atmosphere of defeat and hopeless. The reader of this extract can imagine the
whole scenery in front of his eyes.
In conclusion, it is noteworthy that the skill to choose the most suitable
word for every context and every situation is an
essential part of language
acquisition. Based on the examples provided above, we can state that
synonyms are two or more words which share (in the broad sense) the same
denotational meaning yet often contain different connotations.
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www.goodreads.com/book/show/143398
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Many linguists used to stress that the English language is peculiarly rich
in synonyms owing to Britons’, Romans, Saxons, Danes and Normans’ fighting
and settling upon the soil of the British Isles. “As
a result, British scholars
studied Greek and Latin and for centuries used Latin as a medium for
communication on scholarly topics”
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Synonymy has its characteristic patterns in each language. Its peculiar
feature in English is the contrast between relatively simple stylistically neutral
words, literary words borrowed from French and learned words of
Greco-Latin
origin. “This results in a sort of stylistically conditioned triple “keyboard” that
can be illustrated by the following :
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