
They have a huge, central role in word choice for both prose and poetry. Synonyms make language more interesting, more meaningful, and more relevant. Since word choice is everything in language (probably the most crucial part!), the importance of synonyms is beyond measure.

Words like “rapidly,” “gobbling,” “awful,” and “terrible” are much more descriptive than “quickly,” “eating,” and “bad”-they have the same meanings as Sentence 1, but stronger connotations.

They come in all parts of speech: nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and so on. The term synonym comes from a combination of the Ancient Greek syn, meaning with, and onoma, meaning “name.” Synonyms are regular and essential parts of everyday language that we use almost without thinking. When words or phrases have the same meaning, we say that they are synonymous of each other.

A synonym ( sin- uh-nim) is a word that has the same or nearly the same meaning as another word.
