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"linguistically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is connected with language or the scientific study of language
"linguistically" Antonyms

150 Sentences With "linguistically"

How to use linguistically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "linguistically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "linguistically". Mastering all the usages of "linguistically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Because determing if something is hate speech is linguistically nuanced.
But the rest of the vast country was linguistically fractured.
Dwight Eisenhower was old, linguistically inept, and a cultural philistine.
Queens is the most linguistically diverse area on the planet.
Home and Alexa are much more linguistically flexible in this regard.
Our American apologies are often nothing more than linguistically limber exercises.
But Microsoft's label makes it linguistically impossible to even specify those points.
Such linguistically sensitive schooling demands more resources than most governments can afford.
" She called Ms. Nöstlinger's work "closely observed, linguistically playful and wonderfully imaginative.
Mr. Biden is stuck in the last century, both linguistically and culturally.
Which is a little linguistically hacked together but did get the message across.
All the more reason to take a linguistically informed approach to teaching it.
In linguistically divided Belgium, inter-agency co-operation is known to be dire.
What is greater than possibly the first sentient and linguistically capable talking horse?
Despite Jefferson's fondest wishes, we've only grown linguistically closer together over the centuries.
He specializes in a linguistically rich indirection that can occasionally verge on opacity.
Uyghurs are culturally and linguistically distinct from Han Chinese, the country's dominant ethnic group.
Do you want to create a language that's a genuine, realistic, linguistically viable language?
They exist to teach you linguistically, not to communicate anything about the actual world.
Sixty percent of the older adult population is linguistically isolated, while 70% live alone.
Linguistically, China wants to be like America—a country where language and script are unified.
If you're reading anything at that depth, it brings this deep nourishment, linguistically and technically.
It continues to insist on recent immigrants' becoming "German" not just linguistically but also culturally.
Here was a poetry resolutely modern and hard-edged yet meticulously structured and linguistically glittering.
Madagascar is an outcast — geographically, linguistically, and politically, it stands apart in its corner of Africa.
For Mestrovic, the broader his ability to express himself linguistically, the more his art could say.
Men and women alike have been tweeting rebuttals about what consent, both linguistically and legally, entails.
If these songs are a fascinating historical record of a changing city, they are also important linguistically.
Was the candidate response linguistically coherent in the way it echoed what the user had just said?
Linguistically you can have great conversations with Dutch people, but not so much in terms of comedy.
If and when they do, they'll find an array of ways to engage linguistically with the museum.
It also is an ethnically, culturally and linguistically simpatico friend of China, welcoming its burgeoning economic prowess.
"This was their curriculum that was intended to be responsive to them...culturally, linguistically, educationally," Martinez said.
Hong Kongers, he says, are racially, culturally and linguistically distinct from the Han majority of northern China.
Hate speech is one of the hardest, because determining if something is hate speech is very linguistically nuanced.
There are nearly 850 languages spoken in the country, making it the most linguistically diverse place on earth.
In communities that were more than 20 percent linguistically isolated, 69 percent converted to active status, researchers found.
Linguistically, of course, that's nonsense, though it didn't stop Trump from seizing on Spicer's interpretation in subsequent days.
Doctors who are able to communicate with their patients, culturally and linguistically, are able to give better care.
" Stephens even went so far as to use the appropriative pseudonym Pedro Velasquez "to authenticate his fiction linguistically.
She received a master's certificate from George Washington University in special education for culturally and linguistically diverse learners.
Uighurs have more in common, culturally and linguistically, with Turks than Han Chinese, and many Uighurs are Muslim.
Linguistically, the move was effortless; Mr. Vongerichten had grown up speaking Alsatian, a dialect more German than French.
The north-eastern state of Assam is among the most ethnically, linguistically, religiously and topographically mixed bits of India.
Text Analysis uses Natural Language Processing to linguistically understand the text and apply statistical techniques to facilitate the analyses.
Uyghurs regard themselves as linguistically, culturally and ethnically close to central Asia, despite a long history of Chinese rule.
In an increasingly diverse America, culturally, racially and linguistically "different" immigrants are refashioning the American nation in new ways.
Its two choreographers, Damien Jalet and Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, come from linguistically opposed (French versus Flemish) segments of Belgium.
How language is our higher capacity, the ability to express something linguistically and contextualize it through words is necessary.
But the Americans tasked with carrying out that strategy were ill equipped, linguistically and culturally, to make it work.
She might also be the most linguistically gifted first lady, as she speaks four languages, including heavily accented English.
The initial results and exit polls suggest the linguistically divided country could take some time to form a federal coalition.
The state is among India's most ethnically, linguistically and religiously varied, and practises some of its most toxic identity politics.
Even allowing for the unfavorable network environment of a CES show floor, the demonstration's responses were delayed and linguistically stilted.
Of course there's a big idea behind it: Understanding language itself and creating software as linguistically fluent as you or me.
Brazil, the region's most linguistically diverse country, runs the risk of losing a third of its 180-plus languages by 2030.
Even linguistically Galicia is not so far from some members of the Celtic League: Cornish only has a few hundred fluent speakers.
Physically coiled and linguistically expansive, Yoav (Tom Mercier, charismatic and expressively stoic), has arrived in Paris with little more than his clothes.
It is linguistically and politically accurate to suggest that 2016 has been a year of near-total humiliation for the GOP establishment.
Though some have questioned whether Belgium's fragmented and linguistically divided bureaucracy could be slowing things down, Mr. Jonniaux flatly rejected that idea.
Welty's writing, wry and linguistically zany, was the only version of "South" I knew, and it made me eager to go there.
In a linguistically divided country, the Smurfs have become a unifying symbol in Belgium alongside chocolate, waffles, beer and the national soccer team.
At the center of this linguistically and structurally complex novel are two siblings, one of whom is adopted, who are deeply in love.
Linguistically, engolo may be tied to the zebra (ongolo), a highly regarded animal which also uses kicks to defend itself or attack a rival.
As a teenager, Bo Burnham built his comedy career by posting linguistically dexterous, vigorously brazen rap videos to his YouTube channel from his bedroom.
And because Cantonese words are so linguistically and tonally complex—more so than Mandarin—this can often become a complicated stumble in the studio.
That's when we started realizing we needed to bring on Chinese collaborators, filmmakers who both knew storytelling but also were culturally and linguistically Chinese.
Romantic love may top the list of linguistically overdetermined human experiences, and yet the beauty of it is that it always feels brand-new.
Linguistically, it's less that Mr. Trump deliberately pulled something off than that he didn't have to even try to do anything beyond the ordinary.
If you wanted to say, "reading stories about new dictionary entries is peak word-nerd behavior," you would be linguistically correct, by Merriam-Webster's standards.
I look at things linguistically a lot, and I just noticed that we put the word "big" before "black" a lot to describe certain things.
But because there are so many dialects of Ewe he had to employ linguistically talented pupils to translate for those who did not understand his Ewe.
Hamm's acceptance speech was as linguistically economic as one you might expect from Draper: he thanked everyone briefly, made a Chumbawumba joke, and exited the stage.
"Næʊ, ləmi təljə hæʊ dəm foks lıv": those words mark a new willingness on Kelley's part to make things difficult for his readers, linguistically and otherwise.
Parges, being fictional, doesn't even have a real-world analogue, but its citizens have darker skin and linguistically different names than the people of the Nation.
It has a relatively open market and a newbie population that is large, linguistically diverse and poor, which makes it a proxy for the second half worldwide.
For the past few months, Google has been feeding 2,865 romance novels into an artificial intelligence engine to help loosen it up — linguistically at least, BuzzFeed reports.
The two also performed together in several recurring sketches, channeling Beyoncé and Prince, Barack and Michelle Obama and the linguistically challenged art dealers Nuni and Nuni Schoener.
I'm trying to take this task and this process of responding to this text and creating this text extremely seriously, with whatever I have, linguistically, sonically, emotionally.
This includes, prenatal care and birth control, preventative care, HIV/AIDS testing and treatment and culturally and linguistically competent services, despite the fact that they pay taxes.
What in the World In-laws may be universally intimidating, but in some cultures, the deference paid them rises to a whole new level, at least linguistically.
Pidgin helps bring together, at least linguistically, large parts of a continent carved up by European colonizers who were later replaced, in many cases, by corrupt leaders.
For the original crypto community, playing the long game and waiting for the upstart crypto usurper to get linguistically cut back down to size seems the best option.
The problem is that China is one of the most linguistically diverse countries in the world, with about 130 ethnic-minority languages as well as its Han ones.
After a year, he left to serve in the war in a secret mission, where more linguistically gifted Nisei studied Japanese so they could work as military translators.
Their party, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam or AIADMK, espoused Tamil exceptionalism: the idea that Tamils are racially, linguistically and culturally distinct from Aryan, Indo-European northerners.
This is despite the fact that two-thirds of one-way permit holders come from Guangdong, the Chinese province that is most similar to Hong Kong culturally and linguistically.
"London Fields" by Martin Amis Does Amis have us right where we wants us, clothing his acid, linguistically ingenious postmodern noir in the lurid trappings of ironic genre narrative?
Students graduate not once their objects are visually compelling; it is when they can justify the existence of those objects (or performances, practices, interventions, or whatever) on linguistically satisfying terms.
The region, that was once part of the Austrian empire, has been left with many linguistically-segregated institutions, but one of the few unaffected by this environment is the Foxes.
While the world stage rewards, even demands, the creation of global citizens who are culturally and linguistically fluent, the resources we allocate to language acquisition do not reflect this necessity.
The difficulties she experienced, not just linguistically but as an Asian woman in a homogeneous white milieu, made Yang realize that selves are fragile things — they can break in transit.
The main body contains the Latin translation of the Psalms, yet additional columns employ Anglo-Saxon and Norman French to enrich and explain the text to its linguistically diverse audiences.
INDIA, with its 1.3bn people, vast territory and 22 official languages (along with hundreds of unofficial ones), is well known as one of the most linguistically diverse countries in the world.
Drakeo (pronounced "Draco," like the ancient Athenian legislator) in particular has inspired scores of less linguistically dextrous imitators, some of whom have rushed to fill the power vacuum created by his absence.
The hybrid rental car's battery died in Santiago do Cacém, and it took four hours, three jump-starts and at least two linguistically treacherous phone calls to get it up and running.
It never patronises its fans linguistically: pages are strewn with wonderfully monosyllabic yelps and tee-hees, but also more sophisticated words and puns that encourage children to view language as playful rather than onerous.
OK, I'll buy that, because that's how I'm rolling linguistically these days, but you're not fooling anyone, least of all your health care professional, into thinking this is a healthy decision on your part.
It has other, older attractions to asylum-seekers too: it is closer to the Northern Triangle than is the United States, it is culturally and linguistically more familiar and it processes asylum claims faster.
Ultimately, their attention focused on Bilal and Yusufu, both of whom are Uighurs (a Turkic, predominantly Muslim ethnic group who are linguistically, culturally and religiously distinct from China's mostly Han population) from Xinjiang, China.
Though New York City is one of the most linguistically diverse spots on Earth, Hawaiian — along with roughly half of the world's six or seven thousand languages — has been in danger of going extinct.
And it's boring in a way that's actually boring, as opposed to the the kind of boredom we tweet about when we're actually just linguistically displaying a manifestation of choice-anxiety and millennial-arrogance.
But to be honest, as much as the Welsh like to pride themselves on being different culturally and linguistically—which we undoubtedly are—there is a very minuscule border that separates England from Wales.
Ken Lui and his wife understand the island's appeal -- Taiwan is close to Hong Kong geographically, culturally and linguistically, and he said he hopes to open a boutique or restaurant on the island after moving.
Linguistically divided Belgium held a "Super Sunday" of European, national and regional elections, which resulted in a shift to the right in more prosperous Dutch-speaking Flanders and to the left in French-speaking Wallonia.
Linguistically, then, India is neither as unified as the United States nor as divided as the EU. The author of India's anthem, Rabindranath Tagore, also saw value in comparing his country to both Europe and America.
New York is one of the most linguistically diverse spots on Earth, with an estimated 600 to 800 languages spoken in the city, the most common, after English, being Spanish, Chinese, Russian, Korean and Haitian Creole.
An archipelago republic of more than 7,500 islands, the Philippines remains one of the world's most linguistically diverse regions, with a heritage of Malayo-Polynesian languages and the lingering colonial influence of Spanish and American occupation.
The succinctly conceived, linguistically charged exhibition lends itself easily to book form, and the accompanying catalog is filled with stark scans of the implements from the show and poetic descriptions of what our worldly impulses mean.
Puns are also linguistically fascinating demonstrations of the rich intersection of language and extralinguistic knowledge, and, for some people, irresistible expressions of the synapses that keep firing past the point of mere communication, eloquence or decorum.
And that really was what made them so exciting — using language in a way I'd not used it before, to transcribe such an intimate area of my being that I'd never before attempted to linguistically lay bare.
"The patients, the American population is getting diverse ethnically, culturally, linguistically," Batalova says, stressing that the demographic of doctors in the US doesn't reflect the diversity of the patients—most doctors in the States only speak English.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads CHIANG MAI, Thailand — DIASPORA: Exit, Exile, Exodus of Southeast Asia upends notions of traditional craft in contemporary culture, through looking closely at a densely populated and culturally and linguistically diverse region.
The story uses narrative fragments and tense changes to draw readers into a linguistically created temporal jumble, in which time and memory cease to be experienced in a linear manner, and all events and times exist simultaneously.
Mr. Delury also said that it can be linguistically confusing for Asians when Americans transition quickly to calling them by their given names — an informality that can often be seen as disrespectful in an East Asian context.
But the new name ignited outrage among the Dhudhuroas, a local Aboriginal group, who said the new name was culturally and linguistically inappropriate, as it applied to a different group that lived miles away from the ridge.
"To confirm our view of the 'plain meaning' of the words, we asked Steven Pinker … a noted linguist, to analyze the statute to determine the natural and linguistically logical reading or readings of the section," the pair wrote.
And the two countries have drifted apart, linguistically and even physically: a study of North Korean refugees in the South suggested that boys were on average 10cm (4 inches) shorter than southerners the same age, and girls 7cm.
Juan Goytisolo, one of Spain's most celebrated writers, whose experimental, linguistically audacious novels and stories savaged his country's conservatism, both religious and sexual, and gloried in its Moorish past, died on Sunday at his home in Marrakesh, Morocco.
In the time he made his case to the people we came to learn that he believes "the" African-Americans live in hell — linguistically defining us as a monolithic block of existential misery worthy of pity and more police.
After all, the empire-building and thirst for military bases that led the United States to take Puerto Rico away from Spain in 1898 are long since obsolete, and Puerto Rico is linguistically, culturally, and economically distinct from the United States.
Long before "One Day at a Time," Mr. Harrington had created another character who became a television comedy staple: Guido Panzini, a linguistically maladroit Italian golf pro, whose fractured-English monologues enlivened shows hosted by Jack Paar and Steve Allen.
What is interesting to emphasize is that what we call "the language" of a country, such as Italian, is just one of a cluster of linguistically related varieties that for cultural, historical and political reasons was chosen as the standard variety.
Despite Machiavelli's call in 1513 for Italian unification in the final pages of "The Prince," Italy only became a single nation in 1861; its deep regional divisions are still felt politically, linguistically, gastronomically and in the infrastructure of its transit systems.
What is also usually left unsaid is this: In a country that is so ethnically and linguistically diverse, but also one that is still heavily tribalist, the colonizer's language is more unifying than its citizens might ordinarily like to admit.
By some measures, Vanuatu is per capita the most linguistically diverse country on the planet: Its quarter-million citizens, predominantly the native ni-Vanuatu, speak as many as 140 different indigenous languages and maintain an astonishing variety of cultural practices.
While in China the traditional system has fallen out of use, people still linguistically distinguish between someone's nominal age (xusui), based on the traditional system, and real age (shisui), even if most will give the latter -- which also counts legally -- when asked.
As the last imperial dynasty, the Qing, crumbled, the search was on to find a unifier for a sprawling empire, culturally and linguistically diverse, that encompassed Manchu rulers, Tibetan herders, Turkic caravan-drivers, Hunanese peasants, Shanghainese entrepreneurs and colonial subjects in Hong Kong.
We can do this with more funding for culturally and linguistically appropriate educational programs, including in our schools, awareness campaigns, preventive care, and treatment and support services, including those delivered through the community health centers so vital to many in minority communities.
Belgium, a politically fragmented and linguistically divided country, has come under heavy criticism in recent days after a number of astonishing law enforcement and intelligence errors leading up to the deadly attacks at the airport and the Maelbeek subway station in Brussels.
They are angry at immigrants who have taken over some jobs, at the way communities they cherish are changing demographically and linguistically, and at what they perceive as a stifling political correctness that leaves whites accused of racism when they speak up.
Linguistically, the term refers to all the marvelous words that are created by mishmashing two other words together — like an evangelist on television becomes a televangelist, or the awful air conditions on the West Coast combine smoke and fog to create noxious smog.
Events of the past few weeks remind us: In an age of stark ideological differences on the home front, we need objective, committed, academically knowledgeable and linguistically fluent professionals in diverse fields, ranging from government and public health to aerospace industries and agriculture.
" A more linguistically playful writer might have asked the same question with the shift of "the head" to "a head," thus positing the notion of ahead while pointing to what Beining later describes as "my stinking noggin, / my lost identity… (poem v).
But the job of determining what is and isn't offensive is a complex one socially and linguistically, and obviously awareness of the speaker's identity is important in some cases, especially in cases where terms once used derisively to refer to that identity have been reclaimed.
"We have a bunch of NGOs that partner with us in linguistically diverse regions around the world, and we just launched our 'citizen linguists' program, which is a volunteer arm of our company, and they're constantly updating and approving and cleaning up definitions," Quinn said.
It is also important to note that this reading of the pardon power's impeachment exception is linguistically consistent with the text: "except in cases of impeachment" arguably refers to any crime related to the impeachment, as much as it does to the narrow conviction.
"If mindfulness helps people feel more relaxed then I think that that's fantastic and anything that allows people to have better access to resources is really important, particularly when they're culturally and linguistically relevant," said Dawson-Hahn, who has treated immigrant and refugee children.
These two books are remarkable contributions to the critical work written about Acker and should serve current and future generations as inspiration to push the boundaries of what is linguistically sound, to eroticize the mundane, and to never stop being a character in a story.
This time it's in an awareness of the social reality the show's been portraying for 15 years, a reality which is now, thanks to a certain wild-haired, linguistically inventive Falstaff gone bad, at the center of American politics: the hollowing-out of the white working class.
Person-to-person, Musk's vision would enable direct "uncompressed" communication of concepts between people, instead of having to effectively "compress" your original thought by translating it into language, and then having the other party "decompress" the package you send them linguistically, which is always a lossy process.
More from STAT News: Andy Slavitt can't stop: How a health care wonk became a rabble-rouserHow a drug ad made its way into 'General Hospital'As hopes for polio eradication rise, the endgame gets complicated, and a vaccine runs short He was not always so linguistically challenged.
A linguistically restrained version of Mr. Duterte, who has been compared to Donald J. Trump, would be quite a change for a man who cursed Pope Francis for creating traffic delays, made light of the 1989 rape and murder of an Australian missionary and boasts of sexual conquests.
Standard stories of the evolution of human culture are framed in terms of rational problem solving, creative intelligence, invention, foresight and linguistically mediated planning — the inventions of fire, shelters from the storms, agriculture, the domestication of animals, transportation systems, systems of political organization, weapons, books, libraries, medicine and computers.
Basically, this means they can save work by leveraging a common base and only focusing on adding differentiation for stuff that changes significantly in terms of what kind of answers it'll prompt Alexa to give region-to-region, which should make Alexa smarter, faster and more linguistically flexible over time.
She renders Kossola's story as he told it, not only linguistically, in his dialect, but narratively, in his own wandering way—sending readers into sad silences and on distracted errands of the sort she'd shared with him, closing the garden gate on them the way he'd closed it on her.
So, when Austria-Hungary found itself on the losing side of World War I and its territory started to be parceled out into new nations under the Treaties of Versailles and Trianon, the new Eastern European states weren't nearly as linguistically homogenous as their nationalist leaders sometimes liked to pretend.
Taraneh Fazeli, in relation to a publication the Canaries are producing as part of her curatorial project "Sick Time, Sleepy Time, Crip Time: Against Capitalism's Temporal Bullying," facilitates a somatic and discursive workshop where people who are not members of the collective move through a series of paired exercises that consider the temporal shape of care and examine the different ways we communicate — gesturally, linguistically, affectively.
" (Before "Porgy," she added, one of her biggest challenges was Nico Muhly's 2013 opera "Two Boys," whose text-message-laden libretto often gave her no choice on this front.) And what about that droll but linguistically thorny "It Ain't Necessarily So" lyric, in which the irreverent Sportin' Life explains the biblical story of Jonah as follows: FO' HE MADE HIS HOME INTHAT FISH'S ABDOMEN Well, Ms. Méndez-Oliver swapped out "home" for "casa" and "abdomen" for "panza," which translates as "belly.
From a distance, it might seem that Cardi B's ascent to the upper reaches of the charts has been rapid — her summer smash "Bodak Yellow (Money Moves)" currently sits at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, behind only Taylor Swift's "Look What You Made Me Do." But Cardi B has been a cross-platform star for years now: first on Instagram, as a straight-talking, linguistically-free girl next door; and then on reality television, giving the New York edition of "Love & Hip Hop: New York" some needed attitude.

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