lexical

The word lexicon can be used as a synonym of dictionary, and the word lexicography refers to the practice of making dictionaries. Both of these words, as well as lexical, derive from the Greek word lexis, meaning "word" or "speech." Another descendant of lexis is lexiphanic, an archaic adjective describing one who uses pretentious words for effect. Lexis should not be confused with the Latin lex, meaning "law," which is used in legal phrases such as lex non scripta, "unwritten law."

Synonyms

Examples of lexical in a Sentence

Quotes--> Extra Examples--> a dictionary provides lexical information—it tells you what the word “cat” means, not all there is to know about cats

Recent Examples on the Web Because JavaScript interprets each number as a string type and does lexical sorting, not numerical sorting. — Sheon Han, WIRED, 4 Mar. 2024 By adopting methods like tiered retention, lexical scoping and hashing, companies can responsibly moderate content while respecting user privacy. — George Ng, Forbes, 20 Feb. 2024 This can help spot linguistic features which humans may miss, calculating the percentage prevalence of words and classes of words, lexical diversity, average sentence length, grammatical patterns and many other metrics. — Mohammed Al-Mosaiwi, Discover Magazine, 7 Feb. 2018 Last August, Hungarian neuroscientists Atilla Andics and colleagues reported that the left hemisphere of the dog brain is selectively activated in response to the lexical properties (i.e. the meaning) of spoken words. — Neuroskeptic, Discover Magazine, 7 Apr. 2017 See all Example Sentences for lexical

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