descriptivist造句
例句与造句
- The descriptivist theory of meaning would include these theses and definitions however, thus refuting these would suffice for refuting the descriptivist theory of meaning as well.
- In both works, he advocated a descriptivist stance, rejecting what he considered to be the excessive purism prevalent in the field, particularly in New York.
- The nearest English equivalent to the Acad閙ie fran鏰ise is probably the Oxford English Dictionary, but that is a decidedly " descriptivist " documentation of English.
- As he states it, the descriptivist theory is " weaker, " i . e ., the claims it makes do not assert as much as a stronger theory would.
- Kripke formally states a number of theses as the core of the descriptivist theory, with these theses explaining the theory in terms of reference ( rather than the sense or meaning ).
- It's difficult to find descriptivist in a sentence. 用descriptivist造句挺难的
- :: : : As much as I hate labels, it may also be that you see things more the descriptivist way, whereas I'm more of the prescriptivist persuasion.
- In 1973 Tyler Burge proposed a metalinguistic descriptivist theory of proper names which holds that names have the meaning that corresponds to the description of the individual entities to whom the name is applied.
- Isn't that is the exact best way to learn a language, particularly to learn it as it is used ( i . e ., correctly in the descriptivist sense )?
- Before Kripke gave his'Naming and Necessity'lectures, a number of criticisms of this descriptivist theory had been published by leading philosophers, including Ludwig Wittgenstein, John Searle and Peter Strawson.
- The descriptivist school would definitely support " longer than me ", because that's what almost everyone actually says these days .-- talk ) 18 : 45, 9 October 2008 ( UTC)
- :As a descriptivist, I think it's worth our while to focus on how a word is commonly understood rather than how it ought to be understood, since Wikipedia is a mainstream encyclopedia.
- I wouldn't call it'standard', ( from a descriptivist perspective ) because, as others point out, these words are increasingly treated as linguistic singulars ( especially'physics').
- According to descriptivist theories, proper names either are synonymous with descriptions, or have their reference determined by virtue of the name's being associated with a description or cluster of descriptions that an object uniquely satisfies.
- It is nevertheless used frequently enough to make it notable, and was formally acknowledged by the descriptivist " Merriam-Webster 11th Collegiate Dictionary " and " Webster's New World College Dictionary ".
- That is, the descriptivist believes there is no such thing as that which was meant to be said, only that which came out of one's lips . talk ) 18 : 21, 21 April 2013 ( UTC)