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○   Boggle.

Lettris

Lettris is a curious tetris-clone game where all the bricks have the same square shape but different content. Each square carries a letter. To make squares disappear and save space for other squares you have to assemble English words (left, right, up, down) from the falling squares.

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Boggle gives you 3 minutes to find as many words (3 letters or more) as you can in a grid of 16 letters. You can also try the grid of 16 letters. Letters must be adjacent and longer words score better. See if you can get into the grid Hall of Fame !

English dictionary
Main references

Most English definitions are provided by WordNet .
English thesaurus is mainly derived from The Integral Dictionary (TID).
English Encyclopedia is licensed by Wikipedia (GNU).

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The wordgames anagrams, crossword, Lettris and Boggle are provided by Memodata.
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Wikipedia

Sememe

                   

A sememe (from the Greek: σημαίνω (sēmaino), "mean, signify") is a semantic language unit of meaning, correlative to a morpheme.

A sememe is a proposed unit of transmitted or intended meaning; it is atomic or indivisible. A sememe can be the meaning expressed by a morpheme, such as the English pluralizing morpheme -s, which carries the sememic feature [+ plural]. Alternatively, a single sememe (for example [go] or [move]) can be conceived as the abstract representation of such verbs as skate, roll, jump, slide, turn, or boogie. It can be thought of as the semantic counterpart to any of the following: a meme in a culture, a gene in a genetic make-up, or an atom (or, more specifically, an elementary particle) in a substance. A seme is the name for the smallest unit of meaning recognized in semantics, referring to a single characteristic of a sememe.

There are five types of sememes: two denotational and three connotational, with connotational occurring only in phrase units (they do not reflect the denotation):[1]

  1. Denotational 1: Primary denotation, for example "head" (body);
  2. Denotational 2: Secondary denotation by resemblance with other denotation: "head" (ship);
  3. Connotational 1: High position, as the role or function of "head" in the operation of the human body;
  4. Connotational 2: Emotive, e.g., meaning in "honey";
  5. Connotational 3: Evaluative, e.g., meaning in "sneak" – move silently and secretly for a bad purpose


  See also

  Notes

  Bibliography

  • Bazell, Charles Ernest (1954). The sememe in "Litera", I. Istanbul. pp. 17–31.  Reprinted in: Hamp, Eric P.; Fred W. Householder, Robert Austerlitz (eds.) (1966). Readings in linguistics II. University of Chicago Press. pp. 329–40. 
  • Vakulenko, Serhii (2005). The Notion of Sememe in the Work of Adolf Noreen, in "The Henry Sweet Society for the History of Linguistic Ideas Bulletin" 44. pp. 19–35. 
   
               

 

All translations of Sememe


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