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Actually, for around 200 years, the words have not been at all synonymous.
Green, for most of American history, was synonymous with money.
The film became synonymous with the school in its early days.
His name has become synonymous with being a yes man.
But in today's economy the two are no longer synonymous.
Its name is synonymous with the republican community in the city.
Her late husband's name was synonymous with the power of positive thinking.
The name of the company has now become synonymous with the League.
But his party, which is synonymous with him, won 36 percent of the vote.
By the time of his published work, however, the terms had become synonymous.
For decades his name was synonymous with the computer company.
As a policy issue, the environment became synonymous with health and safety.
As a result, the absence of one seems synonymous with the other.
Something that made the house synonymous with the kind of men who built it.
"And the council does not believe that both are synonymous."
The term, thus, became synonymous with the central field army.
In homes with only one, the terms are generally synonymous.
And was the city really synonymous with an era of local government?
I wish we had a word for "sort of synonymous but not quite."
But even if it does not, the product name has at least become synonymous with the issue.
"There are many people who want to hear you talk on beauty and black being synonymous."
He was synonymous with taking a stand but always speaking the truth in love.
I mean it was synonymous with trash in my family.
And one of the things, for many years, is that the cars have been synonymous with performance.
At one time, use and abuse of the region were synonymous.
Synonymic notes, either on or with pinned specimens.
This thoroughly researched and crafted reference book contains approximately 2,500 entries, each representing a synonymic series.
With the synonymic underbrush thus cleared, we can now address the origin of yee-haw!
Complete synonymic catalogue Lists type material.
A synonymic list of Lycaenidae from the Philippines.
Descriptions of new australian lepidoptera with synonymic notes.
Global Names Index Taxonomy Drilldown search generates the full synonymic list.
The relationships of the many genera are not yet well established; see below for an ordered synonymic generic checklist, and the Taxobox for navigation.
A synonymic catalogue of Neuroptera Odonata, or dragonflies.
Synonymic Sanskrit transliterations in contemporary use are nirbija, nirvija or nirviija.
Valenki (synonymic and semantic related expressions which mean the same - vа'lenukhi (pl.)
A synonymic catalogue of Lepidoptera Heterocera (moths), Vol.
It is Brennan's haunting voice that has left the most lasting legacy, it has become synonymic with Clannad's work and with Irish music in general.
He was the author of the first catalogue of British butterflies and moths, Synonymic List of the British Lepidoptera (1847-1850).
Glyphic Substitutions: Homophonic and Synonymic in Phoneticism in Mayan Hieroglyphic Writing, ed.
In 1940 A Synonymic list of butterflies of Korea was published by The Korea Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society.
In 1867 he became a curator in the Museum of the Royal Dublin Society, and produced a Synonymic Catalogue of Diurnal Lepidoptera (1871; Supplement 1877).
Taves (1999) charts the synonymic language of trance in the American Christian traditions: power or presence or indwelling of God, or Christ, or the Spirit, or spirits.
Bernard d'Abrera, (1980) Butterflies of the Afrotropical region based on Synonymic catalogue of the butterflies of the Ethiopian region by R.H. Carcasson.
A peculiarity of Russian language is synonymic affixal reduplication, whereby a root may acquire two productive suffixes or prefixes, different, but of the same semantics, with the corresponding intensification of the meaning:
The term submicron is often synonymic to subwavelength in this case, taking into account that the majority of experiments are carried out with the light with the wavelength between 0.8 and 1.6 m; however for other wavelengths this may not be true.
There is considerable confusion between Fox and his less celebrated contemporary the synonymic Rev. William Fox (1813-1881) who was also an amateur scientist and lived and worked on the Isle of Wight at the same time.
Regardless, a number of seminal works exist, including the extensive study and the synonymic catalogue by Townes, but also treatments by other entomologists, namely J. F. Aubert, whose notable collection of ichneumon wasps is in Lausanne.
O'Connor, J.P, Nash, R and Boucek, Z., 2000 A catalogue of the Irish Chalcidoidea (Hymenoptera) Occasional Publication Irish Biogeographic Society 6 135 pp 19 plates, 12 figures ISBN 0-9511514-5-2 Complete synonymic catalogue.
In "How to Make Our Ideas Clear" he proposed that a 'clear idea' (in his study he uses concept and 'idea' as synonymic) is defined as one, when it is apprehended such as it will be recognized wherever it is met, and no other will be mistaken for it.