Paronym
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Paronyms are near-homophones ("soundalike"), near-homographs ("lookalike") and/or near-cognates ("meanalike") — words that are similar but not identical in pronunciation, spelling, and/or lexical meaning — which may cause confusion in their understanding (reception) and usage (production).[1] Paronymy is the relationship between a pair of words or phrases which are similar or partially identical in spelling, pronunciation and/or meaning.[1]
In the discussion of semantic analysis, the term paronym can also be used in a narrower sense to refer to words that are derived from the same root, i.e. cognate words.[2][3]
Examples
English
Examples of English paronyms include:
- accept and except
 - affect and effect
 - alternately and alternatively
 - altitude and attitude
 - artful and artistic
 - artist and artisan
 - authoritative and authoritarian
 - barely and barley
 - billion and bullion
 - breath and breadth
 - capable and culpable
 - childish and childlike
 - cognitive and cognizant
 - collision and collusion
 - command and commend
 - confident and confidant
 - conjuncture and conjecture
 - conservationism and conservatism
 - continuous and contiguous
 - controller and comptroller
 - country and county
 - death and dearth
 - defiant and deviant
 - deprecate and depreciate
 - desperate and disparate
 - detergent and deterrent
 - deviant and devious
 - discord and discourse
 - eclipse and ellipse
 - exception and exemption
 - excise and exercise
 - express and espresso
 - extent and extant
 - fitness and finesse
 - flail and fail
 - flaunt and flout
 - gauge and gouge
 - graceful and gracious
 - haven and heaven
 - historical and hysterical
 - influence and affluence
 - innocent and innocuous
 - inspiration and aspiration
 - lightning and lightening
 - lovely and lovable
 - massage and message
 - motive and motif
 - paronym and patronym
 - plague and plaque
 - popular and populous
 - present and presence
 - president and precedent
 - proceed and precede
 - prolepsis and proslepsis
 - quiet and quite
 - recurring and re-occurring
 - right and rite
 - sensitive and sensible
 - sentiment and sediment
 - succeed and secede
 - telegraph and telegram
 - temple and templar
 - terrible and terrific
 - trifle and truffle
 - upmost and utmost
 - willing and willful
 - wreck, wrack and wreak
 
See also
References
- ^ a b R.R.K.Hartmann; Gregory James (2002), Dictionary of Lexicography, Routledge, p. 106
 - ^ "paronym". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
 - ^ David Crystal (2008), A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics (6th ed.), Blackwell publishers, p. 351