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associative

[ UK /ɐsˈə‍ʊsi‍ətˌɪv/ ]
[ US /əˈsoʊʃəˌtɪv/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. characterized by or causing or resulting from the process of bringing ideas or events together in memory or imagination
    associative learning

How To Use associative In A Sentence

  • Tian Hengshan 72 meters above sea level, Southeast and Dans associative, rock was also red ocher, belongs to the Sinian ferruginous quartzite.
  • We may be informed, for example, that the numbers have a dense linear ordering, that there are associative and commutative operations of addition and multiplication, and so on.
  • My memory, for what it's worth, works in a vague, associative way.
  • And so rhetoric allows associative feminist psychologists to address psychology from outside, but from a recognizable and relevant perspective.
  • This involves a form of associative learning (learning from the association between an action and the reinforcer), rather than any insight.
  • a stimulus such as food is a reinforcer only if its presentation increases the frequency of a response in a type of associative conditioning known as operant conditioning. Behaviorism
  • This results in not just noncommutative geometry, but nonassociative structure as well. Can a Really, Really Fast Spacecraft Turn Into A Black Hole? | Universe Today
  • Dickson worked on finite fields and extended the theory of linear associative algebras initiated by Wedderburn and Cartan.
  • Current models of associative learning explain nonlinear discrimination by assuming that people store stimulus information configural.
  • At the product's heart is a data warehousing solution that provides an associative layer on top of the warehouse itself.
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