Ambiguity can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
||
ambiguity - unclearness by virtue of having more than one meaning | ||
ambiguity - an expression whose meaning cannot be determined from its context |
# | Sentence | ||
---|---|---|---|
1. | noun | There is just so much beauty in ambiguity! | |
2. | noun | Sometimes translations do create ambiguity. | |
3. | noun | Life is full of ambiguity. | |
4. | noun | In English there is a choice between closed and open punctuation; in the former, the writer uses all punctuation that can legitimately be used, whereas in the latter the writer leaves out all punctuation that can be left out without creating ambiguity. | |
5. | noun | There is no ambiguity. | |
6. | noun | There will be no ambiguity. | |
7. | noun | Lucy was surprised at the ambiguity of his language. | |
8. | noun | Is a translator allowed to introduce a minor grammatical error in order to avoid ambiguity? Certainly, because the rule was made for man, not man for the rule. | |
9. | noun | Ambiguity is a major problem in translation. |
Sentence | |
---|---|
noun | |
There is just so much beauty in ambiguity! | |
Sometimes translations do create ambiguity. | |
Life is full of ambiguity. | |
In English there is a choice between closed and open punctuation; in the former, the writer uses all punctuation that can legitimately be used, whereas in the latter the writer leaves out all punctuation that can be left out without creating ambiguity. | |
There is no ambiguity. | |
There will be no ambiguity. | |
Lucy was surprised at the ambiguity of his language. | |
Is a translator allowed to introduce a minor grammatical error in order to avoid ambiguity? Certainly, because the rule was made for man, not man for the rule. | |
Ambiguity is a major problem in translation. |