Galnet - WordNet 3.0 do Galego

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ili-30-15233411-n CILI: i117289
WordNet Domains: archaeology
SUMO Ontology: TimeInterval@
Basic Level Concept: 15113229-n period
Epinonyms: [1] period
[1] period |1|
[0] ili-30-15233411-n (has_hyperonym) |1|
Polaridade:
  positivo negativo
SentiWordNet: 0 0
ML-SentiCon: 0 0
Tempo:
  pasado presente futuro atemporal
TempoWordNet: 0.005 0.089 0.906 0

Explorar o ámbito terminolóxico en [Termonet]
GL Variantes
- Neolítico · [RILG] [DRAG]
CA Variantes
- neolític
EU Variantes
- neolito
ES Variantes
- neolítico
EN Variantes
- Neolithic
- Neolithic_Age
- New_Stone_Age
Glosa
latest part of the Stone Age beginning about 10,000 BC in the Middle East (but later elsewhere)
DE Variantes
- jüngere_Steinzeit
- Jungsteinzeit
- Neolithikum
IT Variantes
- neolitico
FR Variantes
- Néolithique
- néolithique
ZH_S Variantes
- 新石器时代
Relacións léxico-semánticas no WordNet vía ILI (9) - Amosar / Agochar gráfico:
Hyperonyms
(has_hyperonym)
15113229-n: an amount of time
Holonyms
(has_holo_part)
15231964-n: (archeology) the earliest known period of human culture, characterized by the use of stone implements
Related
(has_pertainym)
03090086-a: of or relating to the most recent period of the Stone Age (following the mesolithic)
Glosses
(gloss)
00002142-r: before the Christian era; used following dates before the supposed year Christ was born
Glosses
(gloss)
00085002-r: in or to another place
Glosses
(gloss)
08791167-n: the area around the eastern Mediterranean; from Turkey to northern Africa and eastward to Iran; the site of such ancient civilizations as Phoenicia and Babylon and Egypt and the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity and Islam; had continuous economic and political turmoil in the 20th century
Glosses
(gloss)
15231964-n: (archeology) the earliest known period of human culture, characterized by the use of stone implements
Glosses
(rgloss)
03818001-n: a stone tool from the Neolithic Age
Glosses
(rgloss)
11880791-n: annual European false flax having small white flowers; cultivated since Neolithic times as a source of fiber and for its oil-rich seeds; widely naturalized in North America