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单词 correlative
释义

Definition of correlative in English:

correlative

adjective kəˈrɛlətɪvkəˈrɛlədɪv
  • 1Having a mutual relationship; corresponding.

    rights, whether moral or legal, can involve correlative duties
    Example sentencesExamples
    • At best it seems to be a correlative relationship, and that should not provide justification for censorship.
    • Although both mind and the sensory faculty receive their correlative forms when perceiving or thinking, neither is wholly passive in its defining activity.
    • That is there is a tendency to misspecify the contingent nature of at least some spatial relations as necessary aspects of the social relations with which they are correlative.
    • Of course, a problem with correlative studies such as the present one is that the probability of detecting reproductive costs based on natural variation is low, if individuals adjust reproductive effort to environmental conditions.
    • The conception and the method are intimately correlative.
    • In order to determine the causative or correlative relationships between chemicals and a toxic effect, laboratory and reporting procedures require clear experimentation.
    • In short a correlative relationship developed between capital and alternative cultural formations.
    • To explore possible correlative effects among physiological and growth traits, we conducted two separate analyses of covariance, using the main effects of treatment and species.
    • Does a right always involve a correlative duty?
    • However, even this correlative approach does not necessarily demonstrate the underlying mechanism, especially given the diversity of changes in gene expression, and the likely multi-component nature of resistance.
    • This is not a claim-right, because it involves no correlative duty.
    • It has proved difficult to establish causal rather than merely correlative relationships between carbohydrate accumulation and cold tolerance.
    • These are not merely correlative pairs; they are ranked pairs in which the first item is taken to be naturally superior to the second.
    • Governments and others have a correlative duty not to interfere, except to prevent the most egregious forms of behavior.
    • This correlative construct helps us organize the wide array of histologic, physiologic, clinical, and radiologic features that have been used to describe various bronchiolar disorders.
    • It was also important to determine the degree of universality of the correlative relationships between free amino acid levels and leaf senescence.
    • Whether this represents a cause and effect relationship or simply is correlative remains to be determined.
    • He has the obligation and responsibility of supporting, maintaining and protecting the family and the correlative right to exclude intruders and unwanted visitors from the home.
    • To find out how his intervention affected individuals, he substituted a correlative design for a study of 22 patients with various kinds of supposedly incurable cancer.
    • But when a duty of this kind is imposed for the benefit of particular persons, there arises at common law a correlative right in those persons who may be injured by its contravention.
    Synonyms
    reciprocal, reciprocated, requited, returned, give-and-take, interchangeable, interactive, complementary
    1. 1.1Grammar (of words such as neither and nor) corresponding to each other and regularly used together.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Both coordinators and subordinators may be reinforced by being combined with correlatives, a term used both for the reinforcing item and for that item and the conjunction it accompanies.
noun kəˈrɛlətɪvkəˈrɛlədɪv
  • A word or concept that has a mutual relationship with another word or concept.

    the child's right to education is a correlative of the parent's duty to send the child to school
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Indeed, with this powerful haptic and aural dimensions, it dethrones the classic dominion of ‘sight’ (with its correlatives of omniscience and surveillance).
    • But the demons are also object correlatives for the characters' emotions - emotions that could seem all too trivial to a detached observer.
    • Salvation and sin are correlatives more than opposites.
    • It is an early modern concept, although it has correlatives from the time of the Greeks in allied concepts of stress, debility, appetitive, and saturnine behaviour.
    • Importantly, the contents of this great author's texts are always described, whether through the voice-overs, or by sounds intended as correlatives to the subject matter of the books, but it is never directly read.
    • They are a form of artistic practice, with an art historical context and correlatives in documentary production, self-portraiture, and performance.
    • Committed to his formula, Eliot fails to acknowledge that, at its deepest, modern art, from Shakespeare on, increasingly presents subjective correlatives.
    • Many of the poems intertwine these correlatives and explore his ambiguous relationship to them.
    • Second, it's a very complex world, and it becomes a correlative of Mahler's psychological complexity.
    • For him, one feels, the kitsch motif is first and last an occasion for pictorial experiment, as well as being a perfect correlative for the gratuitous choice to paint in the 21st century.
    • But both works are disciplined demonstrations of film-making's array of formal correlatives for extremes of human experience and perception.
    • This suggests that Hemingway composed his story not only with leitmotifs and correlatives but also with key phrases identifying other Nick stories, and that he expected the reader to find them.
    • The correlatives of the signifieds aroused by such signifiers are emotional states; they remain private to each hearer and cannot be compared with each other, and so consensus cannot be achieved.
    • Although gold has long been viewed as the correlative of a weaker dollar, we have always felt that its long term viability as a genuine safe haven alternative rested on a broadening loss of confidence in paper currencies in general.
    • Her aim is, explicitly, understanding, and subsequent to that medical and social legislation, but she is also drawn by the efforts of poets and artists to find convincing correlatives for the kind of suffering that leads to suicide.
    • He proposes this singular, jarring experience as the physical correlative to a spiritual reality.
    • Beyond establishing shots, Tarkovsky eschews their narrative correlatives, beginning the film with an opening scroll of uncertainties and ellipses.
    • It should not be a surprise that correlatives of these mind-boggling and counterintuitive models would appear somewhere within adjacent fields of cultural endeavor.
    • If the tragedy of the poem consists in Prufrock's fear of and failure to risk vulnerability, these lines configure that fear with a precise correlative for paralysis.
    • There are four other concepts which are correlatives to these.
    Synonyms
    equivalent, opposite number, peer, equal, parallel, complement, match, twin, mate, fellow, brother, sister, analogue

Derivatives

  • correlatively

  • adverb
    • Before discussing current views on this and the earlier thesis, it will therefore be useful to be reminded of what some earlier philosophers have had to say about existence and, correlatively, about ‘is’ and ‘exists’ as verbs of being.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The term theatrical has been redeemed from its derogatory past, and made to suit the same purpose, correlatively, as painterly.
      • This possibility raises the question of whether such family members have a right to such information and, correlatively, whether there is an obligation on health care providers to disseminate such information.
      • Subsequent to its formalization, the policy may be amended by agreement with the Taker of the Insurance, by means of annexes, numbered correlatively, as many times as necessary.
      • So long as I am practically engaged, in short, all things appear to have reasons for being, and I, correlatively, experience myself as fully at home in the world.
  • correlativity

  • nounkərɛləˈtɪvɪti
    • In this paper, we experiment with three heuristics based on correlativity and efficiency.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A second and more important counter example to the correlativity of duties and rights involves charity.
      • This is called the correlativity of rights and duties.
      • Corrective justice links two parties and no more because a relationship of correlativity is necessarily bipolar.
      • The correlativity of this jural relationship shows that the person against whom the liberty is held has a no-right concerning the activity to which the liberty relates.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from medieval Latin correlativus, from cor- 'together' + late Latin relativus (see relative).

 
 

Definition of correlative in US English:

correlative

adjectivekəˈrelədivkəˈrɛlədɪv
  • 1Having a mutual relationship; corresponding.

    rights, whether moral or legal, can involve correlative duties
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Does a right always involve a correlative duty?
    • At best it seems to be a correlative relationship, and that should not provide justification for censorship.
    • The conception and the method are intimately correlative.
    • In short a correlative relationship developed between capital and alternative cultural formations.
    • To find out how his intervention affected individuals, he substituted a correlative design for a study of 22 patients with various kinds of supposedly incurable cancer.
    • Governments and others have a correlative duty not to interfere, except to prevent the most egregious forms of behavior.
    • However, even this correlative approach does not necessarily demonstrate the underlying mechanism, especially given the diversity of changes in gene expression, and the likely multi-component nature of resistance.
    • But when a duty of this kind is imposed for the benefit of particular persons, there arises at common law a correlative right in those persons who may be injured by its contravention.
    • These are not merely correlative pairs; they are ranked pairs in which the first item is taken to be naturally superior to the second.
    • In order to determine the causative or correlative relationships between chemicals and a toxic effect, laboratory and reporting procedures require clear experimentation.
    • This correlative construct helps us organize the wide array of histologic, physiologic, clinical, and radiologic features that have been used to describe various bronchiolar disorders.
    • Of course, a problem with correlative studies such as the present one is that the probability of detecting reproductive costs based on natural variation is low, if individuals adjust reproductive effort to environmental conditions.
    • This is not a claim-right, because it involves no correlative duty.
    • Whether this represents a cause and effect relationship or simply is correlative remains to be determined.
    • It was also important to determine the degree of universality of the correlative relationships between free amino acid levels and leaf senescence.
    • To explore possible correlative effects among physiological and growth traits, we conducted two separate analyses of covariance, using the main effects of treatment and species.
    • It has proved difficult to establish causal rather than merely correlative relationships between carbohydrate accumulation and cold tolerance.
    • He has the obligation and responsibility of supporting, maintaining and protecting the family and the correlative right to exclude intruders and unwanted visitors from the home.
    • That is there is a tendency to misspecify the contingent nature of at least some spatial relations as necessary aspects of the social relations with which they are correlative.
    • Although both mind and the sensory faculty receive their correlative forms when perceiving or thinking, neither is wholly passive in its defining activity.
    Synonyms
    reciprocal, reciprocated, requited, returned, give-and-take, interchangeable, interactive, complementary
    1. 1.1Grammar (of words such as neither and nor) corresponding to each other and regularly used together.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Both coordinators and subordinators may be reinforced by being combined with correlatives, a term used both for the reinforcing item and for that item and the conjunction it accompanies.
nounkəˈrelədivkəˈrɛlədɪv
  • A word or concept that has a mutual relationship with another word or concept.

    the child's right to education is a correlative of the parent's duty to send the child to school
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This suggests that Hemingway composed his story not only with leitmotifs and correlatives but also with key phrases identifying other Nick stories, and that he expected the reader to find them.
    • But both works are disciplined demonstrations of film-making's array of formal correlatives for extremes of human experience and perception.
    • Salvation and sin are correlatives more than opposites.
    • There are four other concepts which are correlatives to these.
    • They are a form of artistic practice, with an art historical context and correlatives in documentary production, self-portraiture, and performance.
    • He proposes this singular, jarring experience as the physical correlative to a spiritual reality.
    • Second, it's a very complex world, and it becomes a correlative of Mahler's psychological complexity.
    • Importantly, the contents of this great author's texts are always described, whether through the voice-overs, or by sounds intended as correlatives to the subject matter of the books, but it is never directly read.
    • The correlatives of the signifieds aroused by such signifiers are emotional states; they remain private to each hearer and cannot be compared with each other, and so consensus cannot be achieved.
    • Although gold has long been viewed as the correlative of a weaker dollar, we have always felt that its long term viability as a genuine safe haven alternative rested on a broadening loss of confidence in paper currencies in general.
    • It is an early modern concept, although it has correlatives from the time of the Greeks in allied concepts of stress, debility, appetitive, and saturnine behaviour.
    • Many of the poems intertwine these correlatives and explore his ambiguous relationship to them.
    • Her aim is, explicitly, understanding, and subsequent to that medical and social legislation, but she is also drawn by the efforts of poets and artists to find convincing correlatives for the kind of suffering that leads to suicide.
    • If the tragedy of the poem consists in Prufrock's fear of and failure to risk vulnerability, these lines configure that fear with a precise correlative for paralysis.
    • For him, one feels, the kitsch motif is first and last an occasion for pictorial experiment, as well as being a perfect correlative for the gratuitous choice to paint in the 21st century.
    • Beyond establishing shots, Tarkovsky eschews their narrative correlatives, beginning the film with an opening scroll of uncertainties and ellipses.
    • But the demons are also object correlatives for the characters' emotions - emotions that could seem all too trivial to a detached observer.
    • It should not be a surprise that correlatives of these mind-boggling and counterintuitive models would appear somewhere within adjacent fields of cultural endeavor.
    • Indeed, with this powerful haptic and aural dimensions, it dethrones the classic dominion of ‘sight’ (with its correlatives of omniscience and surveillance).
    • Committed to his formula, Eliot fails to acknowledge that, at its deepest, modern art, from Shakespeare on, increasingly presents subjective correlatives.
    Synonyms
    equivalent, opposite number, peer, equal, parallel, complement, match, twin, mate, fellow, brother, sister, analogue

Origin

Mid 16th century: from medieval Latin correlativus, from cor- ‘together’ + late Latin relativus (see relative).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 1:20:58