synchronic in English

adjective
1
concerned with something, especially a language, as it exists at one point in time.
synchronic linguistics
adjective

Use "synchronic" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "synchronic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "synchronic", or refer to the context using the word "synchronic" in the English Dictionary.

1. Contemporaneous (also: simultaneous, synchronic, synchronous, monochronic, at the same time) volume_up

2. Synonyms for Coinciding include coincident, coterminous, coextensive, conterminous, contemporaneous, concurrent, synchronous, synchronic, coetaneous and contemporary

3. Synonyms for Coetaneous include concurrent, coincident, contemporaneous, coexistent, synchronous, coexisting, simultaneous, coincidental, synchronic and coeval

4. There are many synonyms of Coetaneous which include Coeval, Coexistent, Coexisting, Concomitant, Contemporaneous, Simultaneous, Synchronic, Synchronous, etc.

5. So a lot of teaching and learning can be thought as less synchronic activities and more diachronic one.sentence dictionary

6. 15 This thesis has mainly explained semantic extension mechanism of basic color terms on the basis of metonymy and metaphor from synchronic approach.

7. It presents synchronic evidence that Aspectual prefixes exhibit different stages of development in the system based on their semantic variation in predicate types

8. This dependency is compensated by first evaluation means in a first regulation cycle-synchronic plane and by second evaluation means in an adaptation plane.

9. Coetaneous: 1 adj of the same period Synonyms: coeval , contemporaneous synchronal , synchronic , synchronous occurring or existing at the same time or having the same period or phase

10. Coinciding: 1 adj occurring or operating at the same time Synonyms: co-occurrent , coincident , coincidental , concurrent , cooccurring , simultaneous synchronal , synchronic , synchronous occurring or existing at the same time or having the same period or phase

11. Contemporaneous: 1 adj occurring in the same period of time “a rise in interest rates is often contemporaneous with an increase in inflation” Synonyms: contemporary synchronal , synchronic , synchronous occurring or existing at the same time or having the same period or phase adj of the same period Synonyms: Coetaneous , coeval synchronal ,

12. Contemporaneous: 1 adj occurring in the same period of time “a rise in interest rates is often Contemporaneous with an increase in inflation” Synonyms: contemporary synchronal , synchronic , synchronous occurring or existing at the same time or having the same period or phase adj of the same period Synonyms: coetaneous , coeval synchronal ,

13. While such anachronistically "young" forms at first sight always seemed paradoxical and were Athetized or emended in the course of textual edition, the paradox turns out to be a pseudo-paradox, once one realizes that the impression of an anachronism is created by the interweaving of two different but nonetheless synchronic varieties of Greek.

14. Coetaneous - of the same period coeval , contemporaneous synchronal , synchronic , synchronous - occurring or existing at the same time or having the same period or phase; "recovery was synchronous with therapy"- Jour.A.M.A.; "a synchronous set of clocks"; "the synchronous action of a bird's wings in flight"; "synchronous oscillations"

15. Exercise has two effects: (i) when the exercise load is too heavy or if the subject is not trained to the exercise conditions, the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenocortical axis (HPA) is strongly activated (somatic stress reaction), and a diachronic (delayed) decrease in total sleep time and slow-wave sleep (SWS) occurs with a synchronic (concomitant) sleep disruption (such as a decrease in REM sleep); (ii) a diachronic enhancement of SWS and (or) REM sleep occurs during moderate training and in athletes, with a moderate HPA activation (neurogenic stress reaction).

16. We must distinguish it clearly from other forms of gradation which developed later, such as Germanic umlaut (man/men, goose/geese, long/length, think/thought) or the results of English word-stress patterns (man/woman, photograph/photography). Confusingly, in some contexts, the terms 'ablaut', 'vowel gradation', 'apophony' and 'vowel alternation' may be heard used synonymously, especially in synchronic comparisons, but historical linguists prefer to keep 'ablaut' for the specific Indo-European phenomenon, which is the meaning intended by the linguists who first coined the word.