释义 |
paradigm
par·a·digm P0057300 (păr′ə-dīm′, -dĭm′)n.1. One that serves as a pattern or model.2. A set or list of all the inflectional forms of a word or of one of its grammatical categories: the paradigm of an irregular verb.3. A set of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that constitutes a way of viewing reality for the community that shares them, especially in an intellectual discipline. [Middle English, example, from Late Latin paradīgma, from Greek paradeigma, from paradeiknunai, to compare : para-, alongside; see para-1 + deiknunai, to show; see deik- in Indo-European roots.]Usage Note: Paradigm first appeared in English in the 1400s, meaning "an example or pattern," and it still bears this meaning today: Their company is a paradigm of the small high-tech firms that have recently sprung up in this area. For nearly 400 years paradigm has also been applied to the patterns of inflections that are used to sort the verbs, nouns, and other parts of speech of a language into groups that are more easily studied. Since the 1960s, paradigm has also been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework, as in a new paradigm for understanding diabetes. This usage was acceptable to 91 percent of the Usage Panel in our 2009 survey. Applications of the term in other contexts show that it can sometimes be used more loosely to mean "the prevailing view of things." The Usage Panel also accepts these nonscientific extensions. In 2009, 74 percent accepted the sentence The paradigm governing international competition and competitiveness has shifted dramatically in the last three decades. This represents a dramatic increase over the 48 percent that accepted the same sentence in 1993.paradigm (ˈpærəˌdaɪm) n1. (Grammar) grammar the set of all the inflected forms of a word or a systematic arrangement displaying these forms2. a pattern or model3. a typical or stereotypical example (esp in the phrase paradigm case)4. (Philosophy) (in the philosophy of science) a very general conception of the nature of scientific endeavour within which a given enquiry is undertaken[C15: via French and Latin from Greek paradeigma pattern, from paradeiknunai to compare, from para-1 + deiknunai to show] paradigmatic, paradigmatical adjpar•a•digm (ˈpær əˌdaɪm, -dɪm) n. 1. a set of all the inflected forms of a word based on a single stem or root, as boy, boy's, boys, boys'. 2. an example serving as a model; pattern: a paradigm of virtue. [1475–85; < Late Latin paradīgma < Greek parádeigma pattern; <paradeiknýnai to show side by side =para- para-1 + deiknýnai to show] paradigm1. a declension, conjugation, etc. that provides all the inflectional forms and serves as a model or example for all others. 2. any model or example. — paradigmatic, paradigmatical, adj.See also: GrammarThesaurusNoun | 1. | paradigm - systematic arrangement of all the inflected forms of a wordinflection, inflexion - a change in the form of a word (usually by adding a suffix) to indicate a change in its grammatical function | | 2. | paradigm - a standard or typical example; "he is the prototype of good breeding"; "he provided America with an image of the good father"epitome, prototype, imageexample, model - a representative form or pattern; "I profited from his example"concentrate - a concentrated example of something; "the concentrate of contemporary despair"imago - (psychoanalysis) an idealized image of someone (usually a parent) formed in childhood | | 3. | paradigm - the class of all items that can be substituted into the same position (or slot) in a grammatical sentence (are in paradigmatic relation with one another)substitution classcategory, class, family - a collection of things sharing a common attribute; "there are two classes of detergents" | | 4. | paradigm - the generally accepted perspective of a particular discipline at a given time; "he framed the problem within the psychoanalytic paradigm"perspective, view, position - a way of regarding situations or topics etc.; "consider what follows from the positivist view" |
paradigmnoun model, example, original, pattern, ideal, norm, prototype, archetype, exemplar He was the paradigm of the successful man.paradigmnounOne that is worthy of imitation or duplication:beau ideal, example, exemplar, ideal, mirror, model, pattern, standard.Translations
paradigm
paradigm (in the philosophy of science) a very general conception of the nature of scientific endeavour within which a given enquiry is undertaken paradigm - any example or representative instance of a concept or a theoretical approach, e.g. MERTON's (1949) summary exemplifying discussion of the strengths and pitfalls of functional analysis in sociology. In some branches of philosophy a ‘paradigm case’ is seen as providing an ‘ostensive definition’ of a concept.
- see SCIENTIFIC PARADIGM.
Paradigm a system of the various inflectional forms of a word. A paradigm shows the way a word’s appearance is modified according to the grammatical categories inherent in a word. A noun, for example, has inflectional forms for gender, number, and case, and a verb for person, tense, and aspect. A paradigm is a pattern of change in a word, based on grammatical categories. It is an example of a declension or conjugation. Since a paradigm is characterized by lexical identicalness of a stem, it is frequently represented as a table of endings that are to serve as a model for the inflection of a given part of speech or for the derivation of word forms (formoobrazovanie). A description of a paradigm takes into account the number of members in the set (a paradigm is a closed series of forms), the order in which the members are arranged, the endings of each member of the paradigm, and the possible morphophonemic transformations of the stem and/or endings. Any restricted system of secondary formations with a single base is often called a paradigm; such a paradigm may be morphological, lexical, derivational, or some other type. Linguists usually use the concept of syntactic paradigm to designate a system of forms of a sentence, as in syn uchitsia (“the son is studying”), syn uchilsia (“the son studied”), and so forth. Paradigms may be either partial (or minor), consisting of groups of forms with a certain organization, or complete (major), comprising a complement of partial paradigms. In Russian, for example, the complete paradigm of adjectives includes three singular paradigms, one plural paradigm, one paradigm of short forms, and the forms for the degrees of comparison. E. S. KUBRIAKOVA paradigmPronounced "pah-ruh-dime." A model, example or pattern. See paradigm shift and metaphor.paradigm
paradigm [par´ah-dīm] a shared understanding among scientists or scholars working in a discipline regarding the important problems, structures, values, and assumptions determining that discipline.paradigm An example, hypothesis, model, or pattern; a widely accepted explanation for a group of biomedical or other phenomena that become accepted as data accumulate to corroborate aspects of the paradigm's explanation or theory, as occurred in the 'central dogma' of molecular biology. See Central dogma, Paradigm shift.
PARADIGM Endocrinology A clinical trial–Pramlintide for Amylin Replacement Adjunct for Diabetes in Glycemic Managementparadigm 1. A human being's mental model of the world, which may or may not conform to that of others but is often stereotypical. 2. In the philosophy of science, a general conception of the nature of scientific operation within which a particular scientific activity is undertaken. Paradigms are, of their nature, persistent and hard to change. Major advances in science-such, for instance, as the realization of the concept of the quantum or the significance of evolution in medicine-involve painful paradigmic shifts which some people, notably the older scientists, find hard to make. FinancialSeeWeb 2.0PARADIGM
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PARADIGM➣Personal Archives Accessible in Digital Media |
paradigm Related to paradigm: paradigmaSynonyms for paradigmnoun modelSynonyms- model
- example
- original
- pattern
- ideal
- norm
- prototype
- archetype
- exemplar
Synonyms for paradigmnoun one that is worthy of imitation or duplicationSynonyms- beau ideal
- example
- exemplar
- ideal
- mirror
- model
- pattern
- standard
Synonyms for paradigmnoun systematic arrangement of all the inflected forms of a wordRelated Wordsnoun a standard or typical exampleSynonymsRelated Words- example
- model
- concentrate
- imago
noun the class of all items that can be substituted into the same position (or slot) in a grammatical sentence (are in paradigmatic relation with one another)SynonymsRelated Wordsnoun the generally accepted perspective of a particular discipline at a given timeRelated Words |