synonymously in English

adverb

in a synonymous manner, with the same meaning

Use "synonymously" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "synonymously" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "synonymously", or refer to the context using the word "synonymously" in the English Dictionary.

1. The terms crater and Caldera are often used synonymously, but Calderas are larger than craters.

2. Today, these are considered separate phyla; Coelenterata is used synonymously with Cnidaria.

3. Apheresis, therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), and plasmApheresis are terms that often are used synonymously, but incorrectly

4. The terms crater and caldera are often used synonymously, but Calderas are larger than craters.

5. The word Aerobics is often used synonymously with exercise, but the concept is often misunderstood

6. Altered immunocompetence, a term often used synonymously with immunosuppression, immunodeficiency, and immunocompromise, can be classified as primary or secondary

7. Attrition and turnover are sometimes used synonymously, when in fact they mean two different types of employee churn

8. In fact, allopatry is often used synonymously with “Allopatric speciation,” the process in which intrinsic (i.e., genetic) reproductive isolation …

9. A Buyout is the acquisition of a controlling interest in a company and is used synonymously with the term acquisition

10. Alkalizing discovery in Netherlands in 1828, hence the phrases dutched cocoa or alka-lized cocoa are now used synonymously in today’s chocolate industry

11. A Concave function is also synonymously called Concave downwards, Concave down, convex upwards, convex cap or upper convex.

12. The term is also used synonymously with Ciphertext or cryptogram in reference to the encrypted form of the message

13. “Mouth” is often used synonymously for speech or the power of speech, as can be seen from some of the instances cited above.

14. Because the definitions of animal products and animal Byproducts are similar, manufacturers often use the terms synonymously or in the same breath.

15. Synonymously & Antonymously: Hate Nobody; What a codependent parent might say to guilt her child; And the singer is? May 19, 2016 11:32PM

16. The term Egyptian Arabic is usually used synonymously with "Cairene Arabic", which is technically a dialect of Egyptian Arabic

17. 1 MB is technically 1, 000, 000 Bytes, therefore, megaBytes are often used synonymously with mebiBytes, which contain exactly 1, 048, 576 Bytes (2^20).

18. The word Urdu seems to have come into use during the Moghal period in the camps of the Moghals , but it appears to have been used almost synonymously with Hindi .

19. "Human capital" is sometimes used synonymously with "human resources", although human capital typically refers to a narrower effect (i.e., the knowledge the individuals embody and economic growth).

20. Therefore, Afferent and efferent neurons use a neuron which forms a connection between two or more neurons that we synonymously call an interneuron or association neuron

21. It is often used synonymously with hyperbaton, but can also specifically refer to a specific type of inversion (adjective after the noun).Keep reading to find famous examples of Anastrophe in literature and speech.

22. As Sir George Watt observed , these expressions were used synonymously , and with the more commonly used term san was associated with the same confusion that characterised the English expression ' hemp ' in later years .

23. We must distinguish it clearly from other forms of gradation which developed later, such as Germanic umlaut (man/men, goose/geese, long/length, think/thought) or the results of English word-stress patterns (man/woman, photograph/photography). Confusingly, in some contexts, the terms 'ablaut', 'vowel gradation', 'apophony' and 'vowel alternation' may be heard used synonymously, especially in synchronic comparisons, but historical linguists prefer to keep 'ablaut' for the specific Indo-European phenomenon, which is the meaning intended by the linguists who first coined the word.