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Culture means tradition in English while Sanskriti also means tradition in Hindi. So they have same meaning.
Synonyms are words that have the same or nearly the same meaning.
== == Similar words are called "synonyms."Synonyms
homonyms mean words wich has the same sound but does not have the same meaning
Yes, two words can have the same denotation (literal meaning) but different connotations (emotional or implied meanings). For example, "thin" and "skinny" have the same denotation of being less wide, but "thin" can carry a more neutral connotation compared to the potentially negative connotation of "skinny."
Culture means tradition in English while Sanskriti also means tradition in Hindi. So they have same meaning.
Yes, they can have the same meaning.
Semantic analysis involves using natural language processing techniques to examine the meaning behind words, phrases, and sentences in a text. It typically involves tasks such as sentiment analysis, entity recognition, and topic modeling to understand the context and intention of the text. Techniques like machine learning and deep learning are often used to automate this process.
A pure culture is a microbial culture of only one organism. A microbial culture could contain any number of organisms.
a large group sharing the same culture , language ,or history
bear, carry, brace, underpin, buttress, reinforce
It means good health and protection.
That is true.
It is an instruction for you to carry out the arithmetic operation of subtraction on fractions whose denominators are not the same.
Yes, 'disobedient' and 'disobedience' carry the same meaning. But they do so in different forms and different ways. The word 'disobedient' is an adjective and therefore conveys a lack of obedience by modifying a noun. The word 'disobedience' is a noun, and therefore conveys the action of lacking in obedience.
The actual term is homoeopathy. But over the years both the terms are in use. And they are used alternatively. So you can say they carry the same meaning.
The spelling is "bear" for the large furred mammal, and the verb meaning to carry, or tolerate. Sharing the same pronunciation is "bare," meaning uncovered, or to uncover.