Nobody made up all this English words. All these words come from other words from other languages in the world. The one and only word made up in the world is quiz. One day a man went around stores and places, putting signs up saying to use the word quiz. So basically, each word has a history, except quiz, which was randomly made up.
All words are made up of morphographs. All morphographs have meaning. Some words have only one morphograph and other words are made up of more than one morphograph. All the words in these sentences are morphographs which have meaning. The word 'meaning' is made up of two morphographs 'mean' and 'ing'. The word 'words' is made up of two morphographs 'word' and 's'.
There are several answers to your question, depending on what you are studying. On one level, words are made up of letters. On another level, words are made up of syllables. On a third level, they are made up of phonemes. On a fourth level, they are made up of consonants and vowels. You should really narrow the scope of what you are asking.
No one is in charge of English. Languages change through time and English has. Words dealing with computers are fairly new to the English language. New words are developed all the time that end up in common use.
Asereje in English actually has no meaning to it nor it is a actual word. It is actually just a made up word that was invented that has no meaning at all whatsoever.
It doesn't mean anything...he just mixed up radom words
No- yearbook is made up of the words "year" and "book" which are both English words.
The words made up in "The Smallest Dragonboy" are Jovaline and Barracks. These words are not commonly used in the English language and were invented by the author, Anne McCaffrey.
All words are made up of morphographs. All morphographs have meaning. Some words have only one morphograph and other words are made up of more than one morphograph. All the words in these sentences are morphographs which have meaning. The word 'meaning' is made up of two morphographs 'mean' and 'ing'. The word 'words' is made up of two morphographs 'word' and 's'.
yes all words are made up so you can make up your own words if you want!
There are several answers to your question, depending on what you are studying. On one level, words are made up of letters. On another level, words are made up of syllables. On a third level, they are made up of phonemes. On a fourth level, they are made up of consonants and vowels. You should really narrow the scope of what you are asking.
To the man/woman who made up all words?
To the man/woman who made up all words?
The words in the dictionary are in there to make a note of all words that are spoken so if you do not know what they mean you can look them up. They come from the English Language :)
Look it up here: http://thesaurus.reference.com/ At least for English.
No one is in charge of English. Languages change through time and English has. Words dealing with computers are fairly new to the English language. New words are developed all the time that end up in common use.
by combinig into different compunds, a few elements can make up all living things. ex. there are only 26v letters in the english alphabet, but the combine to make so many different words
The most common words in English, known as high-frequency words, make up about 45% of all written English text. These words are typically short, functional words such as "the," "of," "and," "to," and "in." The specific number of words that make up this percentage can vary slightly depending on the source and methodology used to determine high-frequency words, but it generally falls within the range of 100-200 words.