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Name : Niwana Adegan

NIM : 2213121022
Class : C 21
Subject : Productive Written Language Skill
Title of Task : Note-Taking Cornell Model

Homophony Unrelated
Two or more words are homonyms if they either sound the same
Characteristic (homophones), have the same spelling (homographs), or both, but do
not have related meanings.

What is the example of


Homonymy? Sound Orthograph
y
Homopho Homograph
ny y
Polysemy
Related

Characteristic A word is polysemous if it can be used to express different


meanings.
The difference between the meanings can be obvious or subtle.

What is the Magazine has two meanings :


Storing Information
example of - Something you read
- Cartridge to store bullets for a gun
Polysemy? Storing Bullets

In other words, if you hear (or read) two words that sound (or are
written) the same but are not identical in meaning, you need to

Summary decide
if it’s really two words (homonyms), or if it is one word used in
two
different ways (polysemy).

SENSE RELATIONS
HOMONYMY & POLYSEMY
Feedback

For me Trya ayu fazira as Niwana Adegan feedback partner, the note taking that
already she made is a good important information with cornell model and the point so
the reader can be more easy to get information because from her note taking very
beautiful with bright and appropriate colors so you don’t get bored to read it.

A polysemous word is one word that has through evolution accrued different related
meanings. It branches out from a single root. Mouse refers both to a small animal and
a computer peripheral device. One of those meanings was attached to the word
because of the real-world similarity between the pointing device and a real mouse.

Homonyms, on the other hand, are explicitly different words that just happen to look
and sound the same. A dog’s bark and a tree bark are not etymologically related, even
though they look and sound the same.
Thankyou.

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