adjectivally การใช้
- Indeed, to do so is the soul of journalism adjectivally unadorned.
- Used adjectivally, tupenny, tupenny-hay'penny, and threepenny were common.
- Would you use " now " adjectivally?
- This behavior is known as " nymphal phoresy " ( used adjectivally as " phoretic " ).
- And besides, he says, " when nouns are used adjectivally, the construction should be hyphenated.
- Adjectivally speaking, the most coveted garden flowers tend to be choice, delicate, exquisite or elegant, and preferably also fragrant.
- On the other hand,'Gnosticism'is still adjectivally applied to systems of belief that do not afford knowledge the special significance that the term implies.
- The broadest definition is the word's use adjectivally to mean " matter of plant origin " to distinguish it from " animal ", meaning " matter of animal origin ".
- The bauddha did not call themselves this in India, though they did sometimes use the word adjectivally ( e . g ., as a possessive, the buddha s ) ."
- These non-chromatic light phenomena had earlier been freely rendered adjectivally, but were now mainly expressed in modern German'Glanzverben'like " gl鋘zen " and " schimmern ".
- For example, if " bellum " were used adjectivally ( = " warlike " ), there would be the second declension form " bellus " available for the nom . masc . singular, but no apparent feminine form.
- These can be used in the same two ways as the pronoun-derived forms : adjectivally, as in " Jane's office "; and substantivally, as in " that one is Jane's ".
- So, I guess my question ultimately boils down to this : after a TV-show episode has been " broadcast " ( the verb ) . . . can we describe that episode as a " broadcasted " episode ( adjectivally )?
- :: : : : : I would argue that, while technically listed as noun adjuncts, " oak " and " chicken " in " oak chest " and " chicken soup " act adjectivally, and that noun adjuncts are a sub-set of adjectives.
- I think in your first example " talking " is a present participle acting adjectivally, as described at Gerund # Distinction _ from _ other _ uses _ of _ the _-ing _ form . talk ) 16 : 43, 29 January 2015 ( UTC)
- :: : : I understood the distinction to be between whether " coal (-) mining " is used denominally or adjectivally . " Coal mining ( ie . the mining of coal ) occurs in this region " vs . " This is a coal-mining region ".
- This is not really very confusing-- it's perfectly commonplace to refer to a device in terms of its most important part, or to name it by using its most important part adjectivally-- and hardly needs calling attention to .-- Anonymous, 03 : 13 UTC, October 3, 2008.
- However the second case is distinct; such sentences are not passive voice, because the participle is being used adjectivally; Such constructs are sometimes called " false passives " or " stative " ( or " static ", or " resultative " ) passives, since they represent a state or result.
- The Oxford English Dictionary, which traces factoid from 1973 to 1992, defines it as " something that becomes accepted as a fact, although it is not ( or may not be ) true " and, adjectivally, as " quasi-factual . . . designating a a mixture of fact and supposition ."
- I regard the word as an abstract noun, like'rehearsal','renewal'and'committal': I am surprised to find dictionaries listing it as an adjective only, since I cannot think of a context in which I would use it adjectivally . ( I would construe'archival system'as'system for archival').
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