5. |
R 2021-11-01 03:11:07 Marcus Richert <...address hidden...>
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Comments: |
fork |
4. |
A* 2021-11-01 03:07:51 Marcus Richert <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
"heterographs in Japanese" 2 googits
"homophones in Japanese" 6,580 googits
"japanese homophones" 6,500 googits
"japanese heterographs" 2 googits
"japanese" "heterograph" site:ac.jp 3 googits
"japanese" "homophone" site:ac.jp 476 googits
"heterograph" site:ac.uk 12 googits
"homophone" site:ac.uk 6,030 googits |
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Comments: |
I'm really not a fan of the word "heterograph", I've never heard it used to describe any type of homophones in Japanese or any other language. |
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Diff: |
@@ -5 +5 @@
-<keb>Dr同音異字</keb>
+<keb>同音異字</keb> |
3. |
A* 2021-10-31 10:59:12 Jim Breen <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
GG5: 同音異字 a homophone; a word with the same pronunciation (and similar meaning) as
another but a different written form; words close in meaning pronounced the same but
written differently. |
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Comments: |
So GG5's explanation is right but they got the wrong word? |
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Diff: |
@@ -5 +5 @@
-<keb>同音異字</keb>
+<keb>Dr同音異字</keb> |
2. |
A* 2021-10-30 13:56:29 Robin Scott <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/同音異字
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homophone
"Homophones that are spelled differently are also called heterographs, e.g. to, too, and two." |
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Comments: |
Wikipedia gives plenty of examples that don't have similar meanings (including ones with opposite meanings).
Homophones can have the same written form. |
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Diff: |
@@ -12,2 +12,2 @@
-<gloss>homophone</gloss>
-<gloss>word with the same pronunciation and similar meaning as another but a different written form</gloss>
+<gloss>heterograph</gloss>
+<gloss>word with the same pronunciation as another but a different written form</gloss> |
1. |
A 2007-12-20 00:00:00
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Comments: |
Entry created |