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lex -is
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Lexis
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Etymology
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From λέγω (légō, “speak”) + -σῐς (-sĭs)
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Pronunciation
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IPA(key): /lék.sis/ → /ˈlek.sis/ → /ˈlek.sis/
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Noun
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λέξῐς • (léxĭs) f (genitive λέξεως); third declension
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a saying, speech
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a way of speaking, diction, style
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word, phrase
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explanation
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(grammar) a word peculiar in form or significance
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Term Lexis
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all the words of a language
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In linguistics, the term lexis (from Ancient Greek: λέξις 'word') designates the complete set of all possible words in a language, or a particular subset of words that are grouped by some specific linguistic criteria. For example, the general term English lexis refers to all words of the English language,[1] while more specific term English religious lexis refers to a particular subset within English lexis, encompassing only words that are semantically related to the religious sphere of life.
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Lexeme, Morpheme
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Morphemes are the smallest unit of meaning.
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Where is a Lexeme is the smallest unit of meaning with root and related derivatives within a language
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So for example “turning” has one lexeme based on the root “turn“. It’s two morphemes: turn +ing.
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lexeme [ lexis -eme ]
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Greek lexis word, speech + English -eme
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Objective: [object ive]
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morpheme
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-ive
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word-forming element making adjectives from verbs, meaning "pertaining to, tending to; doing, serving to do,"
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adjective
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- philosophy : existing outside of the mind : existing in the real world
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- expressing or dealing with facts or conditions as perceived without distortion by personal feelings, prejudices, or interpretations
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Reference in New Issue
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