Galnet - WordNet 3.0 do Galego

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Pescudas no Galnet

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ili-30-11014652-n CILI: i95340
WordNet Domains: history religion
SUMO Ontology: Human@
Basic Level Concept: 10453533-n Bishop_of_Rome
Epinonyms: [3] leader [3] Christian
[3] leader |1|
[2] ili-30-09505153-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
[1] ili-30-10453533-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
[0] ili-30-11014652-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
[3] Christian |1|
[2] ili-30-09679925-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
[1] ili-30-10453533-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
[0] ili-30-11014652-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
Polaridade:
  positivo negativo
SentiWordNet: 0 0
ML-SentiCon: 0 0
Tempo:
  pasado presente futuro atemporal
TempoWordNet: 0.006 0 0.994 0

Explorar o ámbito terminolóxico en [Termonet]
CA Variantes
- Gregori_XIII
ES Variantes
- Gregorio
- Gregorio_XIII
- Hugo_Buoncompagni
- Ugo_Buoncompagni
Glosa
El Papa que promovió la introducción del calendario moderno
EN Variantes
- Gregory ['grɛgɝi]
- Gregory_XIII
- Ugo_Buoncompagni
Glosa
the pope who sponsored the introduction of the modern calendar (1572 1585 )
FR Variantes
- Grégoire
Relacións léxico-semánticas no WordNet vía ILI (10) - Amosar / Agochar gráfico:
Hyperonyms
(has_hyperonym)
10453533-n: the head of the Roman Catholic Church
Related
(has_pertainym)
03070352-a: of or relating to Pope Gregory XIII or the calendar he introduced in 1582
Related
(related_to)
03070352-a: of or relating to Pope Gregory XIII or the calendar he introduced in 1582
Glosses
(gloss)
00238022-n: the act of beginning something new
Glosses
(gloss)
01535709-a: belonging to the modern era; since the Middle Ages
Glosses
(gloss)
02220148-v: assume responsibility for or leadership of
Glosses
(gloss)
10453533-n: the head of the Roman Catholic Church
Glosses
(gloss)
15173479-n: a system of timekeeping that defines the beginning and length and divisions of the year
Glosses
(rgloss)
03070352-a: of or relating to Pope Gregory XIII or the calendar he introduced in 1582
Glosses
(rgloss)
15174218-n: the solar calendar now in general use, introduced by Gregory XIII in 1582 to correct an error in the Julian calendar by suppressing 10 days, making Oct 5 be called Oct 15, and providing that only centenary years divisible by 400 should be leap years; it was adopted by Great Britain and the American colonies in 1752