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13 Sentences With "lexicologist"

How to use lexicologist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lexicologist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lexicologist". Mastering all the usages of "lexicologist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Concerning myself with such matters qualifies me as a lexicologist.
Although Wiedemann was also an outstanding lexicologist and compiled comprehensive dictionaries, his calling was grammar.
It was put on the map by Nişanyan House and its resident owner – writer, lexicologist and activist Sevan Nişanyan.
Richard Oliver Heslop (1842–1916) was a British businessman, author, historian, lexicologist, lexicographer, songwriter and poet. His most famous work is the two-volume "Northumberland Words".
His Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English secured his reputation both as a lexicologist and as an eccentric, and he continued revising it at intervals for the rest of his life.
Kokona on a 2013 stamp of Albania Vedat Kokona (August 8, 1913 – October 14, 1998) was an Albanian translator, writer and lexicologist of the 20th century, well known for his dual dictionaries English-Albanian and French-Albanian and his contributions in Albanian lexicology and lexicography.
Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1993. The original manuscript copy by al-Farahidi is believed to have survived up until the fourteenth century when it seems to have disappeared. However summarized copies by the Spanish lexicologist Abu Bakr al-Zubaydi (d. 989), were circulating in the Spanish province of al-Andalus by the tenth century.
In 1994 and 1995, Peter Harbison gave up the hypothesis of a 12th-century church and claimed that the placename Gallarus meant "the house or shelter of foreigner(s)" (Gall Aras), the said "foreigner(s)" being pilgrims from outside the peninsula.Peter Harbison, Pilgrimage in Ireland: The Monuments and the People, Syracuse University Press, 1995, 256 p., pp. 77–78. However, this does not accord with lexicologist Padraig O Siochfhradha's translation of the name as "rocky headland" (Gall-iorrus).
There exist several interpretations as to the origin and meaning of the Irish placename Gallarus. Archaeologist Peter Harbison ventures the meaning to be something like "the house or shelter for foreigner(s)" (Gall Aras), the said foreigners being possibly "these pilgrims that have come from outside the Peninsula." However, according to lexicologist Pádraig Ó Siochfhradha (aka An Seabhach), the name does not refer to a foreign settlement but to a rocky headland (Gall- iorrus).T. J. Barrington, Discovering Kerry: Its History, Heritage and Topography, Collins Press, 1999, 336 p.
Rajna Dragićević, PhD, () is a Serbian linguist, lexicologist and lexicographer.Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts - Bulletin of Scientific Research 2004 She is a full professor at the Faculty of Philology, the University of Belgrade, Serbia. Dragicevic is the author of over 250 articles published in Serbian and international linguistic journals. She published four books, Pridevi sa značenjem ljudskih osobina u savremenom srpskom jeziku (2000), Leksikologija srpskog jezika (2007, 2010),Leksikologija srpskog jezika, (Zavod za udžbenike, 2010) Verbalne asocijacije kroz srpski jezik i kulturu (2010),Verbalne asocijacije kroz srpski jezik i kulturu Leksikologija i gramatika u skoli (2012).
This was known as an equus publicus.Livy I.43 Theodor Mommsen argues that the royal cavalry was drawn exclusively from the ranks of the patricians (patricii), the aristocracy of early Rome, which was purely hereditary.Cornell (1995) 245 Apart from the traditional association of the aristocracy with horsemanship, the evidence for this view is the fact that, during the republic, six centuriae (voting constituencies) of equites in the comitia centuriata (electoral assembly) retained the names of the original six royal cavalry centuriae. These are very likely the "centuriae of patrician nobles" in the comitia mentioned by the lexicologist Sextus Pompeius Festus.
In 1846, poet Vladimir Raevsky was stationed in the castle, during which time he established a pro-Decembrist organization of progressively- minded army officers. From 1816 until 1914, the fortress was converted from a military prison into a jail for debtors, criminals and political prisoners. In 1831, Russian lexicologist Vladimir Dal worked in the castle, at the time writing a dictionary of the Russian language. The castle was the center of the anti-feudalism movement in the Podolia during the 19th century led by the Patriotic War of 1812 cavalry veteran Ustym Karmaliuk (1787-1835), who is now regarded by Ukrainians as a national folk hero.
It is equally likely that when the migrants from Fenderi reached the Gorgan region their abode came to be known as Fenderiasak or Fenderasak or, as the lexicologist F. Steingass's Persian-English Dictionary (1892) noted, Fandarsag. The German Iranist and Avesta scholar Wilhem Geiger (d. 1943) believed that in the Avestan language the word asagh (var. asak) meant “district.” Based on this assumption, arguably Fenderesk (by way of Fenderi-asak, or Fenderi-sak) therefore derived its name from the place being designated as the district of the Fenderi. It is possible that Fandarsag, if a correct form, could have derived from the protonym “vandarasak,” in which “vandar” meant the holder of the mountain and “asak” meant district, yielding the toponym “district of the holder of the mountain,” whom the phonetically inclined – emigrant or outsider - converted into Fandarasak, and eventually into Fenderesak.

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