Second-hand, recycled, worn, not new, passed down, pre-owned, hand-me-down...
alternatively alternately notwithstanding additionally
if they are used in the same context the both words mean the same.
There are quite a few words that were used in old English that are almost the same as they are now, and some that have nearly the same spelling but a completely different meaning. For instance, Shoppe. Shoppe used to be the most common spelling of what we now spell Shop. On the other hand, Protest used to be mainly used to mean "Declare publicly", but now is primarily used to mean a "statement of disapproval". It is still spelled the same way. There are some words that were completely supplanted by other words. Onuppan is one such word, and it has been completely replaced with "Above".
sluggish, inactive
The words that indicate things that are not the same are different, dissimilar, or unlike. In comparisons, the word contrast refers to listing differences.Words that mean the opposite of each other are antonyms.
Incredible is often used to mean "amazing" or "astounding", but technically refers to something that cannot be believed. (credible = believable)
Verbatim.
Title is the name of a book, movie, etc. There are several other words that mean the same thing. Banner, caption, appellation, and headline are all words that could be used instead of title.
The words do not change their meaning in a sentence.
"Homo" in Greek means "same" or "equal." It is used in words like "homogeneous" (same kind) or "homophobia" (fear of the same).
No, a dictionary is for spelling, and Strunk and White is for grammar. A thesaurus is to find other words that mean the same as the word you are looking up.
there is no difference differents words but same meaning like acclamated and get used to mean the same thing