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单词 textual
释义

Definition of textual in English:

textual

adjective ˈtɛkstjʊəlˈtɛkstʃʊ(ə)lˈtɛkstʃuəl
  • Relating to a text or texts.

    textual analysis
    Example sentencesExamples
    • For those able to overlook glaring textual errors, the book's photographs are deeply rewarding.
    • Derrida has two main ways of exposing these textual interplays, deconstruction and double reading.
    • Header text and other textual elements should appear the same throughout the site as well.
    • The set of illustrations is interspersed by textual commentary, which guides the book through a logical chronology.
    • Certain textual lines of descent are clear, between Homer, Apuleius, and Shakespeare, for example.
    • This artefact was provided with a long textual exposition, written by the artist.
    • They were people with a textual background, mostly, coming out of literature.
    • While textual analyses are significant, religion is more than the reading of texts.
    • Still, one needs to be able to identify in some way with the text, and the textual entity that is its author.
    • The nuanced argument is systematically developed and supported by textual evidence.
    • There are simpler reasons why textual analysis remains so popular within media education.
    • The idea, clearly, is to make it easy for students to see the first-hand evidence of textual problems for themselves.
    • It's perhaps merely amusing to think that the author intended all that textual confusion.
    • That submission calls for serious consideration and it has led to some close textual analysis of the paragraph in question.
    • There is a new emphasis on textual analysis, with short answer questions and coursework replacing the old format.
    • Literature, we might conclude, is a speech act or textual event that elicits certain kinds of attention.
    • Since this material does not lend itself easily to contextual approaches, a textual analysis is the only option.
    • Rhetorical purpose and the writer's intention are key elements in textual endeavour.
    • Yet in their very long book there is no actual analysis of Tocqueville's work or reference to any specific textual passage.
    • White is careful not to allow performance studies to overwhelm textual approaches to Renaissance drama.

Derivatives

  • textually

  • adverb ˈtɛkstʃʊ(ə)liˈtɛk(st)ʃ(u)əli
    • Its visually and textually balanced story sheds light on a unique practice and how this religious belief contributes to the cultural and spiritual fabric of an indigenous people.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A textually corrupt quarto of Pericles appeared in 1609 and was reprinted five times; the play was omitted from the first folio of 1623, but was included in the second issue of the third Folio of 1664.
      • Mullen's idea of this kind of hybrid poetry is that there are different registers of language, cultures - high and low - spliced and interlaced together textually.
      • Given the play in question, and the period, a corollary statement might be that Smith's project was the most textually complex Shakespeare edition imagined up to that point.
      • Such a conclusion is as philosophically bizarre as it is textually unwarranted.

Origin

Late Middle English: from medieval Latin textualis, from Latin textus (see text).

Rhymes

contextual
 
 

Definition of textual in US English:

textual

adjectiveˈteksCHo͞oəlˈtɛkstʃuəl
  • Relating to a text or texts.

    textual analysis
    Example sentencesExamples
    • That submission calls for serious consideration and it has led to some close textual analysis of the paragraph in question.
    • There are simpler reasons why textual analysis remains so popular within media education.
    • For those able to overlook glaring textual errors, the book's photographs are deeply rewarding.
    • Header text and other textual elements should appear the same throughout the site as well.
    • The nuanced argument is systematically developed and supported by textual evidence.
    • White is careful not to allow performance studies to overwhelm textual approaches to Renaissance drama.
    • Derrida has two main ways of exposing these textual interplays, deconstruction and double reading.
    • Literature, we might conclude, is a speech act or textual event that elicits certain kinds of attention.
    • The set of illustrations is interspersed by textual commentary, which guides the book through a logical chronology.
    • Yet in their very long book there is no actual analysis of Tocqueville's work or reference to any specific textual passage.
    • It's perhaps merely amusing to think that the author intended all that textual confusion.
    • While textual analyses are significant, religion is more than the reading of texts.
    • There is a new emphasis on textual analysis, with short answer questions and coursework replacing the old format.
    • Rhetorical purpose and the writer's intention are key elements in textual endeavour.
    • Since this material does not lend itself easily to contextual approaches, a textual analysis is the only option.
    • Certain textual lines of descent are clear, between Homer, Apuleius, and Shakespeare, for example.
    • They were people with a textual background, mostly, coming out of literature.
    • Still, one needs to be able to identify in some way with the text, and the textual entity that is its author.
    • This artefact was provided with a long textual exposition, written by the artist.
    • The idea, clearly, is to make it easy for students to see the first-hand evidence of textual problems for themselves.

Origin

Late Middle English: from medieval Latin textualis, from Latin textus (see text).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 14:16:47