释义 |
Definition of communicative in English: communicativeadjective kəˈmjuːnɪkətɪv 1Willing, eager, or able to talk or impart information. Lew was a very communicative chap Example sentencesExamples - My vet is not very communicative or easy to get a call back once the initial treatment is set.
- It sends a message, it is communicative, and it seeks to impact the situation on the ground in a way which leverages a weak tactical situation.
- If that doesn't work then try to be communicative with other people in your class.
- As a result, Suzanne's songs use a language that is simple, communicative and often surprising, particularly for the unexpected stories she chooses to tell.
- Being communicative and self-motivated, she found that soon she was able to do the job without difficulty.
- A doctor with whom you have a good, communicative and friendly relationship is a rare beast.
- He's a straight-talking and personable man and the expectation is that people and priests will find him approachable and communicative.
- The immediacy of his communicative performance made up more than enough for the occasional flat notes of which there were precious few in any case.
- They even adopted the boy, whom they recall as a lively, communicative, and welcomed member of the family.
- Marcus was confused when he arrived in the hospital, poorly communicative (not his usual self).
- I also became noticeably more accessible and communicative.
- Generally, girls start off in school being more articulate and communicative than their male primary friends.
- While you're in a communicative mood, please let us know what you think of our articles, and what subjects you'd like us to cover.
- At the moment, Smart is being open and communicative, signs that she has coped well.
- All six of Cooper's dancers have a strong classical ballet technique from which to push off into the modern, innovative and communicative dance they aspire to perform.
- His social skills improved so that he became more communicative, conversational and animated.
- With a good score behind him and a couple of good catches, he was soon the most communicative person on the field.
- I think your plan to stay open and communicative is vital.
- Never very communicative or outgoing, he continued to work but not to speak.
- You can see people being more affectionate with their children and personally more communicative.
Synonyms forthcoming, expansive, informative, expressive, unreserved, uninhibited, vocal, outgoing, frank, open, candid talkative, conversational, chatty, gossipy, loquacious, garrulous, voluble, verbose, effusive, gushing informal mouthy, gabby, windy, gassy, talky rare multiloquent, multiloquous - 1.1 Relating to the conveyance or exchange of information.
the communicative process in literary texts Example sentencesExamples - The point being, there is a huge difference between writing for pure communicative purposes, and writing for more aesthetic reasons.
- Oh, it's not that nobody ever had a thought about images, representation, visual forms, and their communicative power before now.
- A three hour video conference with New York usually does very little good in achieving the communicative goals that people have set out.
- Technically, all space/time restrictions have been effectively eliminated from the communicative process.
- Allusions and references, in other words, allow writers to engage their readers and listeners actively in the communicative process.
- This is not so as to obtain things there and then, but to share mental states and to build communicative relationships to other people in the long term.
- Similarly, clinicians rarely record all communicative exchanges with patients.
- It required two participants able to mean and to intend, locked into a social context of communicative exchange.
- Instead, identification is the result of a communicative process that interconnects reason and emotions.
- Therefore, their images are an important expressive and communicative resource and should be part of the cultural debate.
- Its communicative possibilities are both opened up and closed off by its layered context of lyrics, background music, and prior performance.
- For example, it requires considerable communicative skill to be able to attribute uncertainty to the current state of medical knowledge rather than to one's own ignorance.
- The website would provide the common interface to these communicative processes, as well as access to the tools for project registration.
- Well, I'd have to argue that a lot of art photography can be conceptual and communicative, as can painting of course.
- The editors invite submissions for a new online edited collection exploring discursive, visual, and other communicative features.
- The use of language for communicative purposes rests on the belief that other persons have minds much like our own.
Derivatives adverb Such implicit norms of well-formed and communicatively successful utterances are not identical with the explicit rules of argumentation. Example sentencesExamples - The results of the present study indicate that while young women appreciate the importance of medical skill, it is the communicatively competent care provider that they most seek.
- First, they are less communicatively responsive.
- In other words, signals are used communicatively within a social group.
- Many people who have acquired normal speaking skills become communicatively impaired when their vocal apparatus fails.
Origin Late Middle English: from late Latin communicativus, from communicat- 'shared', from the verb communicare (see communicate). Definition of communicative in US English: communicativeadjective 1Ready to talk or impart information. the patient was alert and communicative Example sentencesExamples - The immediacy of his communicative performance made up more than enough for the occasional flat notes of which there were precious few in any case.
- A doctor with whom you have a good, communicative and friendly relationship is a rare beast.
- Generally, girls start off in school being more articulate and communicative than their male primary friends.
- I think your plan to stay open and communicative is vital.
- He's a straight-talking and personable man and the expectation is that people and priests will find him approachable and communicative.
- Never very communicative or outgoing, he continued to work but not to speak.
- His social skills improved so that he became more communicative, conversational and animated.
- Being communicative and self-motivated, she found that soon she was able to do the job without difficulty.
- If that doesn't work then try to be communicative with other people in your class.
- With a good score behind him and a couple of good catches, he was soon the most communicative person on the field.
- Marcus was confused when he arrived in the hospital, poorly communicative (not his usual self).
- At the moment, Smart is being open and communicative, signs that she has coped well.
- It sends a message, it is communicative, and it seeks to impact the situation on the ground in a way which leverages a weak tactical situation.
- My vet is not very communicative or easy to get a call back once the initial treatment is set.
- As a result, Suzanne's songs use a language that is simple, communicative and often surprising, particularly for the unexpected stories she chooses to tell.
- I also became noticeably more accessible and communicative.
- You can see people being more affectionate with their children and personally more communicative.
- While you're in a communicative mood, please let us know what you think of our articles, and what subjects you'd like us to cover.
- They even adopted the boy, whom they recall as a lively, communicative, and welcomed member of the family.
- All six of Cooper's dancers have a strong classical ballet technique from which to push off into the modern, innovative and communicative dance they aspire to perform.
Synonyms forthcoming, expansive, informative, expressive, unreserved, uninhibited, vocal, outgoing, frank, open, candid - 1.1 Relating to the conveyance or exchange of information.
the communicative process in literary texts Example sentencesExamples - Technically, all space/time restrictions have been effectively eliminated from the communicative process.
- It required two participants able to mean and to intend, locked into a social context of communicative exchange.
- Its communicative possibilities are both opened up and closed off by its layered context of lyrics, background music, and prior performance.
- Therefore, their images are an important expressive and communicative resource and should be part of the cultural debate.
- A three hour video conference with New York usually does very little good in achieving the communicative goals that people have set out.
- Oh, it's not that nobody ever had a thought about images, representation, visual forms, and their communicative power before now.
- Well, I'd have to argue that a lot of art photography can be conceptual and communicative, as can painting of course.
- This is not so as to obtain things there and then, but to share mental states and to build communicative relationships to other people in the long term.
- The website would provide the common interface to these communicative processes, as well as access to the tools for project registration.
- Allusions and references, in other words, allow writers to engage their readers and listeners actively in the communicative process.
- Similarly, clinicians rarely record all communicative exchanges with patients.
- The use of language for communicative purposes rests on the belief that other persons have minds much like our own.
- The editors invite submissions for a new online edited collection exploring discursive, visual, and other communicative features.
- For example, it requires considerable communicative skill to be able to attribute uncertainty to the current state of medical knowledge rather than to one's own ignorance.
- The point being, there is a huge difference between writing for pure communicative purposes, and writing for more aesthetic reasons.
- Instead, identification is the result of a communicative process that interconnects reason and emotions.
Origin Late Middle English: from late Latin communicativus, from communicat- ‘shared’, from the verb communicare (see communicate). |