different between referent vs overextension
referent
English
Etymology
refer +? -ent
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /???f(?)??nt/
- (US) IPA(key): /???f???nt/
Noun
referent (plural referents)
- (semantics) The specific entity in the world that a word or phrase identifies or denotes.
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:referent.
- That which is referenced.
Derived terms
- absent referent
Related terms
- refer
- reference
Translations
Further reading
- referent at OneLook Dictionary Search
Anagrams
- rent-free, tree fern, treefern
Catalan
Noun
referent m (plural referents)
- (linguistics) referent
Adjective
referent (feminine referenta, masculine plural referents, feminine plural referentes)
- referencing, referring
Derived terms
- referent a
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?r?f?r?nt]
Noun
referent m
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{rfdef}}
.: a person in a certain role - referent (the specific entity in the world that a word or phrase identifies or denotes)
- 1990, Helena B?li?ová, Ján Sedlá?ek, Slovanské souv?tí:
- Neur?enost referentu je totiž v tázací v?t? impulsem pro adresáta, aby referen?ní neur?enost - aspo? z hlediska mluv?ího - odstranil.
- 1992, Slavia, Volume 61:
- Determinovaná NP je obvykle definována jako referen?n? užitá NP, která presuponuje existenci referentu ve spole?ném univerzu promluvy mluv?ího a adresáta (neboli v ?e?ové situaci, na komunika?ní scén?).
- 1992, Naše ?e?:
- Jsou-li determinátory v singuláru, mohou, podle kontextu, odkazovat bud k jedinému referentu, anebo k v?tšímu po?tu referent?.
- 1999, Vladimír Havlík, Mezi jazykem a v?domím:
- Bezpochyby ne?eknu, že nerozumím tvrzení „Braque inicioval kubismus" jen proto, že je mi dostupný nanejvýš deskriptivní zp?sob identifikace referentu jména „Braque".
- 2002, ?eská literatura, Volume 50:
- Eliminace referentu (de facto jeho vykázání mimo oblast významového sm??ování) se stala programní sou?ástí saussurovské strukturální sémiotiky.
- 2013, Lenka Gulová, Radim Šíp, Výzkumné metody v pedagogické praxi:
- Pro rozpoznání referentu (p?edm?tu reálného sv?ta) je podmínkou sjednaná konvence mezi mluv?ími. Pojmenování referentu je sociálním ?inem vznikajícím na rovin? sémantiky.
- 1990, Helena B?li?ová, Ján Sedlá?ek, Slovanské souv?tí:
See also
- denotát
Related terms
- See oferta
Further reading
- referent in P?íru?ní slovník jazyka ?eského, 1935–1957
- referent in Slovník spisovného jazyka ?eského, 1960–1971, 1989
- referent in Akademický slovník cizích slov, 1995, at prirucka.ujc.cas.cz
- REFERENT in Nový encyklopedický slovník ?eštiny, czechency.org
Danish
Noun
referent
- referent (thing which word denotes)
Declension
Further reading
- “referent” in Den Danske Ordbog
Latin
Verb
referent
- third-person plural future active indicative of refer?
Lower Sorbian
Etymology
Borrowed from German Referent, from Latin refer?ns, present participle of refer?.
Noun
referent m (feminine equivalent referentka)
- speaker (“one who makes a speech to an audience”)
Declension
Romanian
Etymology
From German Referent, from Latin referens.
Noun
referent m (plural referen?i)
- consultant, advisor
Declension
referent From the web:
- what references should you include
- what reference means
- what reference covers when fsa-r is payable
- what references to use for first job
- what reference style uses numbers
- what reference is favored in hospital pharmacies
- what reference style for scientific journals
- what reference style is this
overextension
English
Etymology
over- +? extension
Noun
overextension (countable and uncountable, plural overextensions)
- The state or quality of being overextended; extension beyond normal, correct, or appropriate bounds or limits.
- (linguistics) Application of a term to too many referents, as for example when a child uses cat to refer to all animals.
Coordinate terms
- underextension
overextension From the web:
- what's overextension in psychology
- overextension meaning
- what is overextension in language development
- what does overextension mean
- what is overextension and underextension in language
- what causes overextension
- what does overextension mean in linguistics
- what is overextension child
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- referent vs overextension
- term vs overextension
- overextended vs overextension
- overextension vs overextend
- overextension vs overreach
- overextending vs overexerting
- gloatly vs smirky
- smirkiness vs smirky
- smirkily vs smirky
- smirky vs smirk
- probest vs prowest
- crowest vs prowest
- protest vs prowest
- plowest vs prowest
- growest vs prowest
- prowest vs prowess
- probest vs protest
- probest vs probeset
- proovest vs prooves
- stims vs sims