All adjectives in the English language are one of two types: autological adjectives and homological adjectives.
An autological adjective describes itself: for instance the word short is short, so it is autological. Similarly, polysyllabic is autological as is English.
Adjectives which are not autological are homological. Long is homological as is monosyllabic.
The problem: is the word homological itself autological or homological?
(Corollary: is the word autological itself autological or homological?)
Logic problem (perhaps for the geeks)
- emilystrange
- Above the Chemist
- Posts: 9031
- Joined: 03 Nov 2003, 20:26
- Location: Lady Strange's boudoir.
sorry, it didn't crop up in BA Hons Linguistics.
I don't wanna live like I don't mind
- weebleswobble
- Underneath the Rock
- Posts: 5875
- Joined: 09 Feb 2006, 06:57
- Location: The Bat-Milk Cave
- Contact:
FFS Mark, I thought you'd stopped doing meth at work?
‎"We will wear some very loud shirts. We will wear some very wrong trousers."
- emilystrange
- Above the Chemist
- Posts: 9031
- Joined: 03 Nov 2003, 20:26
- Location: Lady Strange's boudoir.
that was in his last job
I don't wanna live like I don't mind