linguistic 的定义
- of or belonging to language: linguistic change.
- of or relating to linguistics.
linguistic 近义词
semantic
更多linguistic例句
- Other elements can affect domestic terrorism, so I factored into my analysis each country’s political system, its gross domestic product per capita, its population size, its degree of ethnic and linguistic diversity and its level of media freedom.
- In the linguistic world where a debate still sizzles over whether the world’s languages are generated by individual cultures or built on a similar foundation, Adger stands firmly on the latter side.
- I found linguistic evidence of racecraft throughout 63 public-facing documents that I collected and analyzed from Airbnb, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, all issued between May 26 and June 24 of this year.
- Many philosophers, both past and present, have pointed to our linguistic abilities.
- Many types of birds, most famously parrots, are able to make noises that at least sound linguistic, and gorillas and chimpanzees have been taught to communicate using sign language.
- In the cases of Yazidis from Sinjar, the contracting firm is L-3, which later became GLS or Global Linguistic Solutions.
- It is a linguistic wish for the same kind of campaign that catapulted Barack Obama forward from the caucuses.
- And this linguistic difference means concrete battles over autism.
- Here in Odessa, the conflict has nothing to do with a linguistic divide.
- Nugent's recent slur against Obama is just one among many of the raging, aging rock star's linguistic stylings.
- His scholarly and linguistic attainments and his varied travels, fitted him well for the task.
- This comparison is made from the linguistic point of view; it is not likely that any one will compare the two as poets.
- His linguistic cleverness was a fair specimen of his general quickness of intellect.
- This specimen of Bellini's conversation is sufficient to show that his linguistic accomplishments were very limited.
- Nor can far-reaching conclusions be drawn from the scanty linguistic evidence at our disposal.