The number and perfection of the languages from which the English is collected, must account for its copiousness and the multitude of synonimous words with which it abounds.
Pure and limpid are here too nearly synonimous to be applied to the same object.
Such an assemblage of synonimous words clogs and enfeebles the expression, and fatigues the mind of the reader.
But the English, on the other hand, abounds with synonimous terms, so that a repetition of words is generally unnecessary, even when there is a necessity of repeating the idea in the same sentence.
Footnote 300: In the margin Purchas gives Boamora as a synonimous name of this bay.
Footnote 311: On former occasions we have conjectured that by frigates, in these older days, very small vessels were intended; and in the present passage frigates and pinnaces are distinctly used as synonimous terms.
For it is impossible in this case, that the word Quakerism should not become synonimous with charity, as it ought to be, if Quakerism be a more than ordinary profession of the Christian religion.
Amber, succinum, karabe, the electron of the ancients, which are synonimous terms, is very inflammable.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "synonimous" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.