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Knowing a word involves understanding its meaning, how it is used in context, its pronunciation, and possibly its spelling. It also includes knowing related words, synonyms, antonyms, and nuances of its usage. Additionally, knowing a word may involve understanding its etymology, associations, and connotations.
You may be looking for a paragraph.
You must know the meaning of a stem to predict a whole word; any affixes modify that stem but are not substantive on their own.
Knowing about how words are made helps you guess the meaning of a word you have never seen or heard before.
The "para" in "paragraph" comes from the Greek word "para," which means "beside." In a paragraph, several sentences are grouped together to discuss a specific idea or topic, appearing beside each other within the same block of text.
No, the word 'enrich' is a verb, meaning to improve or enhance; to make wealthy or wealthier.The noun forms of the verb to enrich are enrichment and the gerund, enriching.
understanding
It helps you by knowing a little bit more of the word
Knowing the structure of a word means how it origins. It makes its meaning very easy to understand.
what is the smae word as blah
enrichir
i think the origin of the word paragraph is greek?
I would think that knowing prefixes and suffixes would come in handy if you don't know a word - you'd be able to decipher it's meaning by determining the meaning of it's prefixes or siffixes.
T.H. Huxley in 1870. it means a-gnostic. "a" meaning without, "gnostic" meaning "knowing"
Getting meaning from context means: Looking at the words around an unfamiliar word to help determine meaning. Sometimes, if you read the entire paragraph that contains the unfamiliar word, you can figure out what the word means.
Nuance is a word that means a subtle difference in meaning.
To make something richer