Linas Selmistraitis SeminarS in engliSh lexicology. SemanticS



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Lexicology. Exercise book

In the following sentences, find the words which can have homo-

graphs in the English vocabulary. Provide these homographs. 

1.  Without  the  right  date  stamped  on  it,  your  ticket  will  be 

invalid.  

2.  Clergymen bow their heads in prayer. 

3.  The statue was covered with minute particles of gold-dust.   

4.  Tom sat on a chair close to the window.

5.  There will be live TV coverage of tonight’s big match.

6.  Polish is a West Slavic language and the official language of 

Poland.

exeRCIse 59.



In  the  following  sentences,  find  the  words  which  can  stand  in 

homonymic relations with the other words in the English vocabu-

lary. Give the homonyms to these words, define their type and 

explain the meanings. 

1.  The slender, flexible right hand was badly cut and grazed.  

2.  It appeared as if there was a sort of match or trial of skill 

you must understand between the kettle and the cricket (Ch. 

D.). 

3.  He who fasts till he is sick must fast till he is well.



4.  At the bank of the river one can see hundreds of frogs.

Part .3



–  –

5.  In the back yard children were playing, elderly women were 

gossiping  and  near  one  of  the  benches  cats  were  fooling 

around.  

6.  Still waters have deep bottoms. 

7.  In the sink a pile of plates waited for someone to wash them 

up. 

8.  The rest of the bridegroom’s friends left the wedding party 



without saying the word. 

9.  Her children now and then noisily stamp down the stairs. 

10. His olive crop was plentiful, the branches were laden; it was 

now necessary to harvest the olives and pickle them up. 

11. A drove of lizards and salamanders, blinded by the sudden 

light, had slithered into the shadow. 

exeRCIse 60.

The following words can have homonyms. Prove it by building 

collocations with these homonyms.    

Bark,  bat,  bill,  blow,  can,  date,  fast,  mean,  mood,  pupil,  rock, 

sack, scale, school, spell, tap. 

exeRCIse 61.



Give the homophones to the following words and make colloca-

tions with each of the homonyms in the homonymic pairs.  

Bawl, bean, blue, bred, coarse, dye, fair, flour, grate, hare, heir, 

herd, higher, hour, knew, made, night, not, paced, pane, plain, 

plumb,  principle,  prophet,  read,  reign,  rite,  road,  seen,  sight, 

soar,  sow,  tail,  threw,  thyme,  tide,  wait,  weak,  where,  whole, 

wholly, won, would.  

Systenatic .Character .of .the .Vocabulary: .Synonyms, .Antonyms, .Homonums



–  –

exeRCIse 62. 



Give your  reasoning  why  these  sentences  can  cause  misunder-

standing and confusion in pronunciation or meaning.  

1.  The bandage was wound around the wound.

2.   The farm was used to produce produce.

3.  The dump was so full that it had to refuse more refuse.

4.  We must polish the Polish furniture. 

5.  He could lead if he would get the lead out.

6.  The soldier decided to desert his dessert in the desert.

7.  Since  there  is  no  time  like  the  present,  he  thought  it  was 

time to present the present. 

8.  A bass was painted on the head of the bass drum.    

exeRCIse 63.

In the sentences given below, find homonyms. Identify the type 

of the homonyms according to the classification based on corre-

sponding paradigms of different parts of speech.

1.  a) When she left the room, an odour of rose lingered around 

the nursery. b) The prices in High Street rose sharply as the 

result of economic crisis.

2.  a) She could not bear the pain and reached for the pain re-

lief. b) Her bare arms look pail as if she never exposed them 

to the sun. 

3.   a) The bough of the tree was full in blooms and bees were 

buzzing around. b) Before them stood an Indian with a bow 

and arrows. 

4.  a) He is delighted to read his name written in the morning 

papers.  b) I read “The Fourth Hand” by John Irving during 

summer holidays.

Part .3



–  –

5.  a) They prefer to lead their life of rich and successful mem-

bers of community.  b) Lead melts easily and is poisonous.

6.  a) He was in the habit of figuring out, while lying like this, 

how and what he could do throughout the day. b) Lying was 

not his habit but a hobby.

7.  a) Harry pulled on his pants and went to bathe at the well.  

b) The final test was written quite well, although the teacher 

clearly expressed her dissatisfaction. 

8.  a) Andrew was silent. With his back turned, he watched that 

bicycle  leaned  against  the  wall  near  the  barn  door.  b)  He 

wanted to back the car from the garage the moment light-

ning struck a nearby tree.

9.  a) Long, long ago, someone had cemented a thick iron chain 

into the eastern wall of Jacob’s stone cottage below the win-

dow. b) He enjoyed his new washing machine because now it 

did the laundry instead of him and dried the clothes quickly. 

However, he hated to iron blankets and pillows.      

10. a) Her mother went to the shops, and on her return, Kath-

leen was nowhere to be found. b) You could found a small 

business if you had enough knowledge, experience and re-

quired capital. 

11. a) I just don’t know what to do – every solution I can think of 

would just open up a whole new can of worms. b) You can 

lead the horse to the water, but you cannot force him drink 

it. 


12. a) I believe that this is a case where a little white lie is really 

more appropriate than the truth. b) When you lie down you 

are in position in which your body is flat on some surface. 

13. a)  When  I  entered  the  room,  the  dog  was  lying  dead  on 

the floor. b) “We were on vacation in Barbados a few years 

ago and we met Freddie Mercury in a bar”, says Phil, lying 

through his teeth. 

Systenatic .Character .of .the .Vocabulary: .Synonyms, .Antonyms, .Homonums




– 0 –

14. a) You shouldn’t be sitting here by yourself, all alone. b) All 

was dark and silent down by the harbour wall.    

exeRCIse 64.



Spell the word given in the phonetic script and provide its homo-

nymic pair. 



1.   That  meeting  achieved  absolutely  nothing  -  it  was  a  com-

plete /we

ɪ


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