Culture can mean a social group or society with the same beliefs and practices. As in, "Agriculture and the making of beautiful pottery were parts of the Hopi Indian culture." Culture can also mean to grow a bacteria or viruses on a growth medium usually with the intend of identifying it. As in, "They did a culture of the mucus in his throat to see if it was a strep infection
It is, of course, illogical to have two opposite meanings for the same symbol. However, language does not necessary evolve in a logical way. Human culture is largely unplanned, it just happens. So if different people decide to use the same symbol in different, or even opposite ways, then the symbol will acquire those different or opposite meanings.
A word that is spelled the same with two different meanings is called a homonym.
The term for two words that look the same but have different meanings and pronunciations is "heteronym."
When a word like "bass" has two different meanings and pronunciations, it is known as a homograph. Homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different meanings.
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No, they have two different meanings
Both cultures value pride and patriotism, and both cultures have an extremely "political" culture, where everyone is constantly being analyzed for hidden meanings, and both value respect. Most of the differences between the two cultures is superficial. There are different ways to show respect, and there are different interpretations of the very same values.
The word you are looking for is "pun." A pun is a play on words that relies on a word's multiple meanings or on two words that sound similar but have different meanings.
A homograph has the same spelling with different meanings, maybe different sound. A homonym has the same sound and may have the same spelling, with different meanings.
A sentence that can be read with two different meanings is called ambiguous. It can be interpreted in more than one way depending on how the words are understood.
A word that has two meanings is called a homonym. These words sound alike or are spelled alike but have different meanings.
"to," "two," and "too" are homophones because they sound the same but have different meanings. "hear" and "here" are homophones as they are pronounced the same but have different spellings and meanings. "knight" and "night" are homophones since they have the same pronunciation but different meanings and spellings.