Bugün öğrendim ki: Anlamsal bir ilişkiyi paylaşan ve belirli bir düzende gruplandırılmış kelimelere Tersinir Olmayan Binomlar/Üçlüler denir. Bu, 'mac' gibi şeyleri içerebilir.
Phrase joining two words In [linguistics](/wiki/Linguistics "Linguistics") and [stylistics](/wiki/Stylistics "Stylistics"), an **irreversible binomial** ,[1] **frozen binomial, binomial freeze* * , **binomial expression, binomial pair** , or **nonreversible word pair**[2] is a pair or group of words used together in fixed order as an [idiomatic](/wiki/Idiom "Idiom") expression or [collocation](/wiki/Collocation "Collocation"). The words have some semantic relationship and are usually connected by the words _and_ or _or_. They also belong to the same [part of speech](/wiki/Part_of_speech "Part of speech"): nouns ( _milk and honey_ ), adjectives ( _short and sweet_ ), or verbs ( _do or die_ ). The order of word elements cannot be reversed.[1] The term "irreversible binomial" was introduced by [Yakov Malkiel](/wiki/Yakov_Malkiel "Yakov Malkiel") in 1954, though various aspects of the phenomenon had been discussed since at least 1903 under different names: a "terminological imbroglio".[ 3] [Ernest Gowers](/wiki/Ernest_Gowers "Ernest Gowers") used the name **Siamese twins** (ie, [conjoined twins](/wiki/Conjoined_twins "Conjoined twins")) in the 1965 edition of [Fowler's _Modern English Usage_](/wiki/A_Dictionary_of_Modern_English_Usage "A Dictionary of Modern English Usage"). The 2015 edition reverts to the scholarly name, "irreversible binomials", as "Siamese twins" had become offensive.[4] Many irreversible binomials are [catchy](/wiki/Catchiness "Catchiness") due to [alliteration](/wiki/Alliteration "Alliteration"), [rhyming](/wiki/Rhyme "Rhyme"), or [ablaut reduplication]( /wiki/Apophony