Parts of โ€œdarkโ€

(adjective) Having an absolute or (more often) relative lack of light.

Below are the parts and wholes of โ€œdarkโ€ drawn from WordNet. โ€œDarkโ€ is made up of evening, small hours, lights-out, and is itself part of day.

โ€œDarkโ€ is made up ofโ€ฆ

Parts that comprise dark (holonyms)

5 parts
โ€œDarkโ€ is a part ofโ€ฆ

Larger things dark belongs to (meronyms)

4 wholes

Understanding Parts & Wholes

  • โ—‰ Blue pills are parts of โ€œdarkโ€ โ€” things it is made up of (holonyms).
  • โ—‰ Purple pills are wholes that โ€œdarkโ€ belongs to (meronyms).
  • โ†’ Click any word to explore its own parts and discover connected vocabulary.
  • โ†’ Use in writing โ€” name specific parts instead of the whole for more precise, vivid descriptions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is "dark" made up of?

"Dark" comprises: evening, small hours, lights-out, late-night hour, midnight. These are its holonyms โ€” the parts that make up "dark".

What is "dark" a part of?

"Dark" is a part of: day, mean solar day, solar day, twenty-four hours. These are its meronyms โ€” the larger things that "dark" belongs to.

What is a holonym?

A holonym is a word that names the whole of which a given word is a part. For example, "car" is a holonym of "engine" โ€” an engine is part of a car. Holonyms help you understand how parts relate to their wholes.

What is a meronym?

A meronym is a word that names a part of a larger whole. For example, "engine", "wheel", and "door" are meronyms of "car". Learning meronyms helps you describe objects precisely and expand your vocabulary.