Here's an example of a semantic gamut: non-existent, unique, rare, uncommon, common, trite, worn-out, universal.
Source: tatoeba (2047342)
Ranked by relevance and common usage.
12 total sentences available.
Here's an example of a semantic gamut: non-existent, unique, rare, uncommon, common, trite, worn-out, universal.
Source: tatoeba (2047342)
Tom always buys "Magic Fairy Soup" at the supermarket. So that no suspicion falls on him, he always says at the register that it's for his (non-existent) daughter.
Source: tatoeba (3885515)
He is looking at something non-existent.
Source: tatoeba (5112562)
Because Esperanto is a completely phonetic language, misspellings are virtually non-existent.
Source: tatoeba (7548445)
Showing 4 of 12 available sentences.
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.