Use "adjectival" in a sentence

1. Adjectival (plural Adjectivals) An adjectival phrase or clause.

2. What does Adjectivals mean? Plural form of adjectival

3. (Adjectival) Prin deșert străbat sălbatec mari familii Beduine, Sorind viața …

4. De hic: adjacente-Adjacentia adject- vide adjic- adjectival adj Gramm

5. A real show of adjectival fireworks from the great Poe himself.

6. The Abilities and Personal Suitability factors were marked using the adjectival scoring guide.

7. Adjectival, adjectivally, adjective, adjectively, adjectives, adjectivism, Adjectivitis, adjunctive, adjunctively, adjustive, adjuvancies, adjuvancy, adjuvant, adjuvants

8. The Oxford English Dictionary lists the adjectival form of the moon's name as Janian.

9. Nominal sense attested since 1746; adjectival sense attested since 1791: pre- +‎ Antepenultimate.

10. The adjectival scoring guide was used in marking the answers to this question.

11. ] An adjectival suffix, meaning made of; as in golden, leaden, wooden. [1913 Webster] 5.

12. It is found only three times in adjectival form in the Christian Greek Scriptures.

13. Grammatically, "Attracted to" is adjectival, and "Attracted by" is verbal

14. Antipathetic Meaning: "having an antipathy," 1630s, an adjectival construction from antipathy

15. A derived adjectival form is hranalegr with the meaning of "harsh, rough, ruthless".

16. A prepositional phrase that behaves Adjectivally is called, quite logically, an adjectival phrase

17. From the original adjectival character of the personal name the neuter noun Herculentiacum developed.

18. Adjection translation in English - French Reverso dictionary, see also 'adjective',action',adjectival',Adjt', examples, definition, conjugation

19. Ablatival, accusatival, adjectival, aestival, agentival, antimediaeval, antimedieval, approval, Architraval, archival, arrival, Arval, carnival, claval, coeval

20. SLAJŠE (sweeter) is the second degree (comparative) of Slovenian adjectival form of "sladko" (sweet).

21. However, time and again, the Jerusalem mentioned is not identified by some adjectival expression.

22. The preposition is part of an adjectival phrase "Contradictory to common sense" and is …

23. 1. Adjectivally - as an adjective; in an adjectival manner Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection

24. [The departmental representative then introduced the Adjectival Scoring Guide and explained how it was used.]

25. As an adjective; in an adjectival manner Familiarity information: Adjectivally used as an adverb is very rare.

26. The Personal Suitability qualifications were assessed globally by the Selection Board using the previously introduced Adjectival Scoring Guide.

27. It is also frequent to derive other words, such as adjectival form "cojonudo" (lit.: Ballsy), indicating admiration.

28. Yet her mark is shown as 60, which, according to their Adjectival Scoring Guide, represents a "Mid Very Good".

29. She received a score of 36/60 which was deemed as a low fair based on the adjectival scoring guide.

30. Based on the adjectival scoring guide, Ms. Grimes received an excellent rating overall, and was awarded the full fifty points.

31. The adjectival noun retains the original nar- conjugation and adds a new tar-: The nar- and tar- forms share a common etymology.

32. Based on the adjectival scoring guide, appellant Cluney received a fair rating and was scored 65 points out of a possible 100 points.

33. The speaker's 'cowardice' may have been a guess at, or a slight mispronunciation of, the adjectival form, 'Cowardish' That is not so crazy.

34. Plural of adjectival; Examples: “It is capable of identifying not only single words, but multiple-word expressions, phrasal verbs, Adjectivals, adverbials and prepositional phrases

35. So, this MAY BE the reason why the Adjectival Scoring Guide was used for K7. or MAY BE the Board felt generous to Patsy again.

36. Maria) are now recognised although this is strictly an adjectival ending, whereas previously purists would have insisted on the noun ending -o (e.g. Mario).

37. History and Etymology for Admonitory borrowed from Medieval Latin Admonitōrius, from Latin admoni- (variant stem of admonēre "to admonish ") + -tōrius, adjectival derivative of -tor, agent suffix Learn …

38. The word "fast" has an Adverbial sense and an adjectival sense.La palabra "rápido" tiene un sentido Adverbial y un sentido …

39. It set out definitional terms and rating criteria for abilities/skills and personal suitability, and explained the application of the Adjectival Scoring Guide in the assessment.

40. The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures says of ʼelo·himʹ: “It is almost invariably construed with a singular verbal predicate, and takes a singular adjectival attribute.”

41. Through reference to its Adjectival Scoring Guide (Exhibit D-10), the members agreed as to what rating category the answer most closely corresponded with, i.e., "poor", "fair", "good", or "very good".

42. The word "Apostolic" is the adjectival form of the noun "Apostle." Apostolic Means "like the apostles." Apostolically Speaking means "Speaking the Apostles D

43. [ʼElo·himʹ] (as applied to the God of Israel) is especially shown by the fact that it is almost invariably construed with a singular verbal predicate, and takes a singular adjectival attribute. . . .

44. In an Attributive or adjectival manner; in a position directly adjacent to and modifying a noun, without any intervening linking verb, as the adjective warm in a warm welcome or …

45. The global approach to the assessment of qualifications normally means that more than one assessment tool is used to arrive at a single adjectival or numerical score for a qualification.

46. In 1962, he was awarded a PhD degree from Heidelberg University for his dissertation on adjectival and verbal color terms in Indo-European languages and the issue of their translation.

47. As in this example, the Adverbal participial usually tells 'when' the action of the main verb takes place, while the adjectival participle helps us identify the noun that it modifies.

48. To quantify the extent to which each manoeuvre possessed these attributes, adjectival ratings ranging from "Excellent" to "Fair" were assigned to each of the twelve manoeuvres, for each of the three manoeuvre evaluation criteria.

49. Note: Russian is like French in that, as a rule, adjectival names begin with a lower case letter, but the Russian word for Abelian is pronounced essentially like abel+ian (абел+ева)

50. The department’s representative noted that, based on his written response (Exhibit D-31), Mr. Reid had received a mark of 40/50 (in the "Good" category of the Adjectival Scoring Guide).

51. Under the 8th-century Abbasids, Arabic zindīq and the adjectival zandaqa could "denote many different things, though it seems primarily (or at least initially) to have signified a follower of Manichaeism."

52. Adjectional Adjectitious Adjectival Adjectivally Adjective Adjective color Adjectively Adjoin Adjoinant Adjoining Adjoint Adjourn Adjournal: Adjournment Adjudge Adjudger Adjudgment Adjudicate Adjudication Adjudicative Adjudicator Adjudicature Adjugate Adjument Adjunct Adjunct notes Adjunction Adjunctive Adjunctively Adjunctly Adjuration

53. In the prayer of the Our Father, the reference to evil becomes explicit; here, the term ponerós (Mt 6:13), which in itself is an adjectival form, can indicate a personification of evil.

54. Lnu (the adjectival and singular noun, previously spelled "L'nu"; the plural is Lnúk, Lnuꞌk, Lnuꞌg, or Lnùg) is the term the Miꞌkmaq use for themselves, their autonym, meaning "human being" or "the people".

55. History and Etymology for Admonitory borrowed from Medieval Latin admonitōrius, from Latin admoni- (variant stem of admonēre "to admonish ") + -tōrius, adjectival derivative of -tor, agent suffix Learn More about Admonitory …

56. This result is in line with previous analyses of adjectival or noun scales. Dimension values of a set of concepts, obtained by artificial sound scales, do correlate with dimension values obtained by noun scales.

57. Based on the foregoing and coupled with the fact that the board used the Adjectival Scoring Guide to rate this answer, it feels that a mark of two (2) points is fair and warranted under the circumstances.

58. Adjectival modifiers for pyroxene mineral names are defined to indicate unusual amounts of chemical constituents. This report includes a list of 105 previously used pyroxene names that have been formally discarded by the Commission.

59. Unfortunately for appellant Smith, her example was not conveyed in a way that demonstrated those assessment criteria, therefore, she could only be awarded a score in the "Fair" category of the "adjectival scoring guide".]

60. Consider the term aficionado (“A person who likes, knows about, and Appreciates a particular interest or activity; a fan or devotee”), for use in a phrase like “She's an aficionado of life.” I don't know of an adjectival form

61. German name of the Bohemian town known in Czech as České Budĕjovice ("Czech Budweis"), from an adjectival form of the Slavic proper name Budivoj, hence "settlement of Budivoj's people."Related: Budweiser.

62. Adjective ("pertaining to or indicating character") and noun ("a distinctive trait; that which gives or indicates character") both first attested 1660s, from character + -istic on model of Greek kharaktēristikos.Earlier in the adjectival sense was Characteristical (1620s)

63. A later chronicle, that of Leonti Mroveli, derives "aznauri" from the semi-legendary ruler Azon (Georgian –uri is a common adjectival suffix), whose 1,000 soldiers defected him and were subsequently named aznauri by Azon’s victorious rival P’arnavaz.

64. Example sentences with "Adjectivals", translation memory WikiMatrix For Classical (Greco-Roman) names, the adjectival form is normally derived from the genitive case, which may differ from the nominative case used in English for the noun form.

65. Adjective ("pertaining to or indicating character") and noun ("a distinctive trait; that which gives or indicates character") both first attested 1660s, from character + -istic on model of Greek kharaktēristikos.Earlier in the adjectival sense was Characteristical (1620s)

66. Appellant Thériault questioned how candidate Stasiuk could receive a better mark than himself for PS1when her referee did not circle four of the key ('must possess') adjectival words in the list whereas his referee circled all of the key words.

67. As to the "Adjectival Scoring Guide" (Exhibit D-8), Mr. Combden stated that approach to rating was used so that the board could assess the candidate overall, not confining itself to simply assigning points and a mathematical approach.

68. * * * * * Witness Roy Ridlington responded initially by referring to the usefulness of the assessment criteria for personal suitability (exhibit D-24) and the range of scores open to the selection board in the adjectival scoring guide (exhibit D-25).

69. They considered all the information they had in relation to the extent it demonstrated the required behaviours, then they determined the appropriate category on the Adjectival Scoring Guide, and then they determined an appropriate mark with the applicable range.

70. Some linguists have claimed that these lexical suffixes provide only adverbial or adjectival notions to verbs. Other linguists disagree arguing that they may additionally be syntactic arguments just as free nouns are and thus equating lexical suffixes with incorporated nouns.

71. NOTE A: Yes, “Antonymously” is an approved word and for the benefit of our passengers who did not pay attention to their English teachers at school, (most of you), it is the adverbial form of the adjectival word, “antonymous,” (OED Approved – March 2016).

72. EPITHET – an adjective or adjectival phrase, also Apathaton, EPITHETON; HUMANIST – one who studies human nature; GLADSOME – feeling pleasure; DAMOSEL – (archaic) a young girl or unmarried woman, also DAMOISEL, DAMOISELLE, DAMOZEL, DAMSEL, DEMOISELLE; OVERDOER – one who overdoes; RAILBUS – a passenger bus on rails

73. I’m not sure if the phrase “bragging rights” is part of the current lexicon, but it comes from Old Norse, “braka,” meaning “to creak noisily, and is the root for Middle English, “Braggen,” which meant “speak boastfully,” or the adjectival form, “bragg,” which meant “prideful.”

74. Save for the related provisions of Paragraph 87f(1), other provisions of the new Paragraphs 87f to 87h of the UrhG appear to me to be largely adjectival or ancillary to this key provision and do not present any significant issues regarding compliance with the directive.

75. Candidates were assessed against a pre-determined set of criteria (Refer to any SRG - review question and expected response) Diagnostic Information Gathering was scored out of a possible thirty points and was assessed globally by the selection board using the previously introduced Adjectival Scoring Guide.

76. Strangely enough, that being the lowest possible category on the adjectival scoring guide, there is no consideration of a candidate receiving no mark at all; the lowest mark in the lowest category is one (1), not zero (0) - the mark which initially was assigned to the appellant.

77. The second way is to introduce the European Charter of Fundamental Rights as a binding charter guaranteeing European citizens immediate rights, both adjectival and substantive, which protect their interests fairly and which convert to the right to compensation in the event that their interests are attacked.

78. Albeit is often used to introduce an adjectival or adverbial phrase that makes a concession about the preceding noun or verb —for example: This morning we gratefully received a long overdue pardon, Albeit temporary, from the gray drearies which have toyed with our sanity all winter

79. Centrifugal (adj.) "flying off or proceeding out from a center," 1690s, with adjectival suffix -al (1) + Modern Latin centrifugus, 1687, coined by Sir Isaac Newton in "Principia" (which is written in Latin), from Latin centri-, alternative combining form of centrum "center" (see center (n.)) + …

80. Corporeal (adj.) 1610s, "of a material or physical nature, not mental or spiritual," with adjectival suffix -al (1) + Latin corporeus "of the nature of a body," from corpus "body" (living or dead), from PIE *kwrpes, from root *kwrep-"body, form, appearance." Meaning "relating to …