| Peter Mark Roget - 1858 - 564 Seiten
...the case ; a latitude which is limited only by the taste and discretion of the writer. On the other hand, it is hardly possible to find two words having...branch of inquiry, which I have not presumed here to enter upon ; for the subject has already occupied the attention of much abler critics than myself,... | |
| Peter Mark Roget - 1884 - 768 Seiten
...find two words having ia all respects the same meaning, and being therefore interchangeable ; that isv admitting of being employed indiscriminately, the...branch of inquiry, which I have not presumed here to enter upon ; for the subject has already occupied the attention of much abler critics than myself,... | |
| Christopher Orlando Sylvester Mawson - 1911 - 710 Seiten
...the case; a latitude which is limited only by the taste and discretion of the writer. On the other hand, it is hardly possible to find two words having...branch of inquiry, which I have not presumed here to enter upon ; for the subject has already occupied the attention of much abler critics than myself,... | |
| Peter Mark Roget - 1911 - 704 Seiten
...of the case a latitude which is limited only by the taste and discretion of the writer. On the other hand, it is hardly possible to find two words having...being therefore interchangeable; that is, admitting of beinf employed indiscriminately, the one or the other, in all their applications. The in vestigation... | |
| Peter Mark Roget - 1916 - 738 Seiten
...the case ; a latitude which is limited only by the taste and discretion of the writer. On the other hand, it is hardly possible to find two words having...all respects the same meaning, and being therefore interchange, able ; that is, admitting of being employed indiscriminately, the one or the other, in... | |
| Werner Hüllen - 2003 - 426 Seiten
...synonymy is conspicuously absent from the introduction. The phenomenon itself is mentioned: 'On the other hand, it is hardly possible to find two words having...indiscriminately, the one or the other, in all their applications' (p. xvi). But synonymy is obviously regarded as a matter of practical experience. Everybody finds it... | |
| |