Definition of common words for families from Macmillan English dictionary Free vocabulary - Online dictionary and free English dictionary for Macmillan Education
The thesaurus lists the words combined according to the similarity of meaning (including synonyms, possibly antonyms), the dictionary provides a definition of the words, and is usually a reference work that lists them alphabetically. The main purpose of this reference work is to help users "find the words that best express and best express ideas". Nomenclature is the vocabulary used to name things in specific areas. A name or terminology, or a rule that forms these terms in a particular art or scientific field. The nomenclature is a system that gives the names of organic compounds. The principle of naming ranges from relatively informal practices in daily speech to internationally agreed principles, rules and recommendations applicable to the formation and use of terms used in science and other fields .
Thesaurus words are ordered in alphabetical order. If a word is used as another part of a part of speech (noun, verb, adjective, etc), synonyms are assigned to each part. To obtain a complete list of synonyms, we may cite another word. This is an example of Hal. Harima found a shovel for his father, and then found a hoe and scorpion. She brought seeds from the house and her and her father persuaded their neighbors to help them and their garden. In the evening, they successfully planted the entire garden. It was gentle rain that night, and helped the growth of the garden.
Synonyms are words of the same meaning. They are listed in a special dictionary called the thesaurus. In a regular dictionary, words are usually listed in alphabetical order, based on the form, words are listed for each meaning in the thesaurus. Synonyms usually have at least one different semantic function. Sometimes, this feature is objective (extended) and refers to the actual, real world differences in the objects being mentioned: walking, wood, walks, twist, turn, stagger, stride, and smashing. Sometimes this feature is subjective (implicit) and refers to speaker recognition to the object being mentioned, not the actual difference of the object itself: death, death, abandonment of ghosts, kicking of buckets, barking . Absolute synonyms are rare in some languages. For example: Sofas and sofas are almost completely synonyms, but their collocation differs in at least one respect.