Minor Scale(Music). The Minor Scale Is Much Sadder And More Whistful Than The Major Scale.
"Onomatopoeia" is the name for The Use Of the descriptive kind of word you're thinking of. Also for The Process Of Creating any new such word: one which itself will sound like or be representative of the sound of the thing it names & so describes - a verb, adverb, adjective, or noun. When a word actually sounds like the thing or action that it is describing in naming, or is understood to be representative of it, it's called an ONOMATOPOEIC word
"Ghalas-at" is pronounced as "gha-las-at." The first syllable "gha" rhymes with "ha," while the second syllable "las" is pronounced like the word "last" without the "t." The final syllable "at" sounds like the word "at."
This sounds like the word that means 'the people' in the language of the indigenous people of the fictional world Pandora in the film Avatar. If you are thinking of something else, revert this answer or contact me on my message board.
"Semantic Satiation"
A word that sounds like what it is trying to describe, like "Bang!" or "Moo".
The word you're looking for is "periphrasis." It refers to the use of elaborate and descriptive language to convey meaning without directly naming the subject. This technique often involves circumlocution, where the description provides enough context for the reader or listener to infer the object being described.
A pronoun is a word that can be used to replace a noun in a sentence. It refers to a specific person, object, or thing without naming them. On the other hand, a demonstrative pronoun specifically points to something in a sentence, indicating its location or position.
plausible
Naming something by using a word that is closely related.
askew
Do you know what you will be naming the baby?
if you are talking in terms of lexicology... Toponomy is the word for the naming of places. Taxonomy, the naming of animals. I'm not sure about people but I know the word Eponym, refers to a person, place or thing that something is believed to be named after.
A noun is called a naming word because a noun is a word for (what you call) a person, a place or a thing.
A homophone for the word "meet" is "meat". The former means something along the lines of congregating, or a competition. The latter is flesh of an animal.
The word our, meaning that something belongs to a group of people. The proper pronunciation of our rhymes with the word hour. The ou makes the ow sound.
Upper & Lower case letters are the naming rules on Microsoft Word 2007.
I remember from my childhood, something that sounds like "piskale"