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linguistically

[ UK /lɪŋɡwˈɪstɪkli/ ]
[ US /ɫɪŋˈɡwɪstɪkɫi/ ]
ADVERB
  1. with respect to the science of linguistics
    linguistically interesting data
  2. with respect to language
    a lingually diverse population
    linguistically impaired children

How To Use linguistically In A Sentence

  • Breakthroughs in decipherment seem to require broad knowledge and lateral thinking, as well as a logical, linguistically trained mind -- and this combination is more often found in "eccentrics" than in conventional scholars. Conversations: A Singularly Human Pursuit
  • A linguistically aware speaker will surely recognize the presence of the agentive morpheme er in the word baker.
  • When they are here we would like to make sure they are orientated and mentored both culturally, linguistically and also into the system in which they are working.
  • But this group is linguistically, culturally, and even genetically diverse.
  • Puerto Ricans and Chicanos are linguistically linked, but if you invite them over for frijoles and serve refried beans, one will be disappointed.
  • Dworkin argues persuasively that in defending the antisegregation principle Bork necessarily engaged in moral philosophy: he chose from among various linguistically and historically defensible rules the one that seemed most "principled. Reagan's Justice: An Exchange
  • In some cases, the definition of parishes by ethnicity was de jure aka “nationality parishes” while in other cases the ethnic fragmentation was de facto, based on geography, as ethnicity and neighborhood boundaries were coterminous anyway.50 Whether de facto or de jure, the objective was to provide a linguistically and culturally comfortable niche in which members of the different ethnic groups could experience their religion, and reinforce their ethnicity. American Grace
  • In fact, the use of an accusative as a kind of "terminative" isn't unusual at all crosslinguistically. Contradictions with authors' accounts of Etruscan word Rasna
  • The search for structural divisions in texts should be seen as a search for cognitive boundaries in terms of convention, appropriacy, and content rather than as a search for linguistically defined boundaries.
  • But do have a stab at Ulysses, if only to see how linguistically inventive and original Joyce was.
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