Where no synonyme is given, the Linnæan name is the only one in use; and when the synonymes are seldom used, they are marked thus *.
The latter opinion is, in all probability, the correct one, although the name, or any of the synonymes quoted above are not now to be met with in any modern French lists.
The early forms in which it was written, will be seen from the synonymes above, they were Pearemaine and Peare-maine.
Diel erred in applying the synonymes of Knoop’s Pigeon bigarré to this variety, which is very distinct from the Pigeonnet.
The different forms in which it has been written will be found in the synonymes given above, none of which afford any assistance as to the derivation or signification of the name.
Dittrich has confounded the synonymes of the Gloria Mundi with Golden Mundi, which he has described under the name of Monstow’s Pepping.
That is to say, out of a large number of synonymes which were supplied by the numerous dialects of the Aryan family, the Greeks perpetuated one, the Romans another.
A portion of these synonymes, which were originally used for all the Heavenly Bodies alike, were exclusively appropriated to the Sun, while other synonymes were appropriated in like manner to the Moon, &c.
This combination of many features of difference with numerous points of resemblance is the direct result of the tendency of each race to abandon a portion of the synonymes originally common to all the various races of mankind.
As regards the Continent of Africa, by this comparison all its synonymes of the class selected for analysis have, with a few trifling exceptions, been exhausted.
The names of Animals and Birds are found to be nearly all either descriptive or imitative, and Synonymes are much more numerous in certain classes of words.
Hence, as will now be explained, another source of thesynonymes in which Human Tongues abound!
It will be apparent that the Heavenly Bodies were originally designated by numerous synonymes applied to the Sun, Moon, and Stars alike.
First Source of Synonymes the Metaphorical Character of Human Language in its Infancy.
The following are examples of the union, in the form of Synonymes in the Persian, of corresponding terms, in which the Celtic and Gothic differ totally from each other.
Veryn' and 'Ben' are both synonymes extant in Welsh for 'a Hill.
Many nouns ending in ness, and adverbs ending in ly, have been omitted in their alphabetical places, for the reason that their synonymes are sufficiently indicated by the corresponding adjectives.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "synonymes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.