homograph

listen to the pronunciation of homograph
English - Turkish
eşyazılımlı
eşyazımlı
eşyazilimli
esyazilimli
homograf
{i} eşyazımlı sözcük
{i} aynı yazılıp farklı anlama gelen sözcük
beautiful
{s} güzel

Doğduğum yer olan Nagasaki, güzel bir liman kentidir. - Nagasaki, where I was born, is a beautiful port city.

İsviçre, çok güzel bir ülkedir ve ziyaret edilmeye değerdir. - Switzerland is a very beautiful country and well worth visiting.

beautiful
{s} nefis
beautiful
zarif

Buz pateni zarif ve güzel olabilir. - Ice skating can be graceful and beautiful.

O güzel ve ayrıca çok zarif. - She is beautiful, and what is more, very graceful.

beautiful
gökçe
beautiful
{s} hoş

Tom sadece güzel kızlardan hoşlanıyor. - Tom likes only beautiful girls.

Bir dağ sırtı eteğinde güzel bir şehirde yaşamak çok hoştur. - It's very pleasant to live in a beautiful city at the foot of a mountain ridge.

beautiful
beautifully güzel bir şekilde
beautiful
ahım şahım
beautiful
keleş
beautiful
gül gibi
beautiful
{s} (çok) güzel
beautiful
akça pakça
beautiful
{s} biçimli
beautiful
harika

Bu tırtıl harika bir kelebek olacak. - This caterpillar will become a beautiful butterfly.

Gökyüzünün harika rengi az sonra yok oldu. - The beautiful color of the sky soon faded away.

beautiful
çok iyi
beautiful
{s} tatlı

O güzel değildi ama onun büyük, nazik kahverengi gözleri ve tatlı bir gülümsemesi vardı. - She wasn't beautiful, but she had big, kind brown eyes and a sweet smile.

Leyla şimdiye kadar tanıdığım en tatlı ve en güzel kızdı. - Layla was the sweetest and most beautiful girl I have ever met.

beautiful
ahu gibi
homographic
{s} eşyazımlı
homographic
{s} aynı yazılıp farklı anlama gelen
English - English
A word that is spelled the same as another but has a different meaning and usually a different etymology
a word that is spelled the same as another, but is different in meaning, origin, grammar, or pronunciation. For example, the noun 'record' is a homograph of the verb 'record' homonym, homophone homophone (homo- + -graphos )
two words are homographs if they are spelled the same way but differ in meaning (e g fair)
two words are homographs if they are spelled the same way but differ in meaning e
One of two or more words identical in orthography, but having different derivations and meanings; as, fair, n
a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different part of speech, and is therefore explained in a separate entry
A word or a symbol which is visually the same as another, but which represents a different sound or meaning A special form of homographs occur with names in Chinese; for, even though a single Han character may be pronounced the same, and refer to the same canonical family name, families who wish to distinguish themselves from others using the same name often create a slightly modified form of the character which they use for their own name In Unicode, these stylistic variations on a single character are not distinctly encoded; however, a mechanism for indirectly encoding this information in Unicode plain text format is currently under consideration
beautiful
a word which has the same spelling as another but different meaning, derivation, or pronunciation Same as "homogram " See also: heteronym, homonym, homophone
a word that is spelled the same as another word but differs in meaning and origin and may differ in pronunciation and syllabication [e g , bow (and arrow) vs bow (bend at the waist)]
fair
a market, and fair, a
A term with the same spelling as, but a different meaning from, another term
{i} word which has the identical written form as another word but differs in sound meaning and origin
homographic
Possessing the property of homography
homographic
Employing a single and separate character to represent each sound; said of certain methods of spelling words
homographic
Spelt identically; written literatim
homographic
{s} pertaining to words that are spelled the same but have different meanings
homographs
plural of homograph
homograph

    Hyphenation

    ho·mo·graph

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'hä-m&-"graf, 'hO- ] (noun.) 1873. From homo- Ancient Greek ὁμός (“same”) + -graph Ancient Greek γράφος (“that which is written”)
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