No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
If it is ONLY a thesaurus, and not a combined thesaurus and etymology (word origins) book, it will not show word origins.
False. A thesaurus provides synonyms and antonyms for words, but it does not typically give the etymology (origin and history) of the words. For etymology, one would need to consult a dictionary or specialized etymological resource.
A Dictionary will give you the meaning of a word, its etymology and its roots, where a Thesaurus will give you words which have a similar (often the same) meaning and can be used in a similar context.
a dictionaryOr, more accurately, an etymology dictionary.
b
we used a thesaurus to cull the most appropriate word to describe his obvious discomfortmom
the etymology of the word ''cereal'' is from laitin
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
What is the etymology of the word persecute its for my language homework
what is the etymology of clement
The word means the history of a linguist form, such as words. So; The etymology of the word salt is Latin in origin. The etymology of the word biology is Greek in origin.