View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Paradigmatic.

Paradigmatic

Paradigmatic | Paradigmatically

Paradigmatic meaning

Of or pertaining to a paradigm. | Related as members of a substitution class. | Exemplary.

Example sentences (19)

The 10-episode series, which stars 's Natasha Lyonne, could prove paradigmatic for the kind of content Peacock seeks in the future in lieu of lavish vampire school drama.

To unpack Marini is to understand him, to appreciate his paradigmatic contribution.

Haley is a paradigmatic spiritual “BoomerCon” (boomer conservative) and doctrinaire neoconservative who, like the Bourbons of old, has “learned nothing and forgotten nothing” from the GOP’s post-2016 course-correcting turn toward nationalism and realism.

Up to 1994, it was a paradigmatic example of an anti-democratic regime – with its apartheid laws explicitly denying equal rights to people from different race groups other than Whites.

Iraq is a paradigmatic example of this.

Simultaneous legal representation of two candidates competing for the same office is a paradigmatic example of a conflict of interest.

According to religious thought, said Eliade, myths establish models for human behavior, and "the more religious man is, the more paradigmatic models does he possess as a guide to his attitudes and actions" (Eliade, The Sacred and the Profane, p. 100).

Additionally, humour was thought to include a combination of ridiculousness and wit in an individual; the paradigmatic case being Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff.

A paradigmatic toolkit gene is Pax6/eyeless, which controls eye formation in all animals.

Author James Basker states that the song has been employed by African Americans as the "paradigmatic Negro spiritual" because it expresses the joy felt at being delivered from slavery and worldly miseries.

Equally crucial but often overlooked or misapplied is the dimension of the syntagmatic and paradigmatic axes of linguistic description.

From it, the casuist would ask how closely the given case currently under consideration matches the paradigmatic case.

He would also argue about the problem he found in the constant appeal to "normality" in the analytical tradition from which Austin and Searle were only paradigmatic examples.

Later in 1988, Derrida tried to review his position and his critiques of Austin and Searle, reiterating that he found the constant appeal to "normality" in the analytical tradition to be problematic from which they were only paradigmatic examples.

Phonology would become the paradigmatic basis for structuralism in a number of different fields.

The death of Henry I from "a surfeit of palfreys " (recorded in other historical works as a "surfeit of lampreys ", Chapter XIII) proves to be a paradigmatic case of the deaths of later monarchs through a surfeit of over-eating or other causes.

The use of the story of this incident is paradigmatic of how archaic mythologems common to Indo European heritage were reused over time grafted onto history.

They argue that the paradigmatic case of Ernest Renan is an idealisation and it should be interpreted within the German tradition and not in opposition to it.

Typically, casuistic reasoning begins with a clear-cut paradigmatic case.