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Some Related Sentences

noun and bright
" In late 2002, Paul coined the noun " bright ," but did not announce it immediately.

noun and was
The deficit of such a bridge was first encountered in history by the Pre-Socratic philosophers during the process of evolving a classification of all beings ( noun ).
It was not until the late 16th century that the two words came to have the same basic meaning as a related adjective and noun.
The word " demiurge " is an English word from a Latinized form of the Greek, dēmiourgos, literally " public worker ", and which was originally a common noun meaning " craftsman " or " artisan ", but gradually it came to mean " producer " and eventually " creator ".
The corresponding noun " esotericism " was coined in French by Jacques Matter in 1828 and popularized by Eliphas Levi in the 1850s.
The adjective feudal was coined in the 17th century, and the noun feudalism, often used in a political and propaganda context, was not coined until the 19th century.
( The adjective genetic, derived from the Greek word genesis — γένεσις, " origin ", predates the noun and was first used in a biological sense in 1860.
The adjective derived from this noun, * þiudiskaz, " popular ", was later used with reference to the language of the people in contrast to the Latin language ( earliest recorded example 786 ).
* The genitive case, which roughly corresponds to English's possessive case and preposition of, indicates the possessor of another noun: John's book was on the table.
Chrétien refers to his object not as " The Grail " but as " a grail " ( un graal ), showing the word was used, in its earliest literary context, as a common noun.
The corresponding noun is amor ( the significance of this term for the Romans is well illustrated in the fact, that the name of the City, Rome — in Latin: Roma — can be viewed as an anagram for amor, which was used as the secret name of the City in wide circles in ancient times ), which is also used in the plural form to indicate love affairs or sexual adventures.
The use of " Lesbian " in medical literature became prominent ; by 1925, the word was recorded as a noun to mean the female equivalent of a sodomite.
The word was used as both a noun and a verb and the usage of carol for a dance form persisted well into the 16th century.
Merriam-Webster notes, " Recent criticism of the use of myriad as a noun, both in the plural form myriads and in the phrase a myriad of, seems to reflect a mistaken belief that the word was originally and is still properly only an adjective .... however, the noun is in fact the older form, dating to the 16th century.
" Minotaur " was originally a proper noun in reference to this mythical figure.
* Whether utility or marginalism was more essential to this revolution ( whether the noun or the adjective in the phrase " marginal utility " is more important )
The construction of the Ninth Fort ( its numerical designation having stuck as a proper noun ) began in 1902 and was completed on the eve of World War I.
According to Carl Meinhof, the Bantu languages have a total of 22 noun classes called nominal classes ( this notion was introduced by W. H. J.
" As a noun, paganus was used to mean " country dweller, villager.
The feminine English noun, priestess, was coined in the 17th century, to refer to female priests of the pre-Christian religions of classical antiquity.
:" As soon as a noun enters the domain of metaphor, as one modern scholar has pointed out, it clamours for extension ; and satura ( which had had no verbal, adverbial, or adjectival forms ) was immediately broadened by appropriation from the Greek word for “ satyr ” ( satyros ) and its derivatives.
It was first spelled in a hyphenated form as an adjective ( thermo-dynamic ) and from 1854 to 1868 as the noun thermo-dynamics to represent the science of generalized heat engines.
The English word " tradition " comes from the Latin traditio, the noun from the verb traderere or tradere ( to transmit, to hand over, to give for safekeeping ); it was originally used in Roman law to refer to the concept of legal transfers and inheritance.
Týr in origin was a generic noun meaning " god ", e. g. Hangatyr, literally, the " god of the hanged ", as one of Odin's names, which was probably inherited from Tyr in his role as god of justice.

noun and coined
The term was first coined as a noun in 1957 by psychiatrist Humphry Osmond as an alternative descriptor for hallucinogenic drugs in the context of psychedelic psychotherapy.
The term frotteur is the French noun literally meaning " rubber " or " one who rubs " and was coined by sexologist Richard von Krafft-Ebing in his book Psychopathia sexualis ( 1886 ).
So frequently do Muslims and Arabic-speaking Jews and Christians invoke this phrase that the quadriliteral verb Hamdala حمدل, " to say al-Hamdu li -' llah " was coined, and the derived noun Hamdalah حمدلة is used as a name for this phrase.
The word pinko was coined by Time magazine in 1925 as a variant on the noun and adjective pink, which had been used along with parlor pink since the beginning of the 20th century to refer to those of leftish sympathies, usually with an implication of " effeteness ".
The adjectival-form, kooky, was apparently coined as part of American teen-ager ( or beatnik ) slang, which derives from the pejorative meaning of the noun cuckoo.
In fact, it was not coined by uniting words " gouvernement " and " mentalité ", but simply by making gouvernement into gouvernementalité just like musical into musicalité government +-al-adjective +-ité abstract noun ( see " Course Context " in Foucault's " Security " lectures ).
The collective noun " hypnagogia " was coined by Dr Andreas Mavromatis in his 1983 thesis, to comprise the names " hypnagogic " and " hypnopompic ", which were coined by others in the 1800's.
However, in American English the-ess suffix is only marginally morphologically productive, and the-ette suffix can indicate a feminine version of a noun without a change in size ( though many such words in-ette were intended to be jocular when they were first coined ).
Time poverty has also been coined as a noun for the phenomenon.

noun and by
A person who participates in archery is typically known as an " archer " or " bowman ", and one who is fond of or an expert at archery can be referred to as a " toxophilite ".< ref > The noun " toxophilite ", meaning " a lover or devotee of archery, an archer ", is derived from Toxophilus by Roger Ascham —" imaginary proper name invented by Ascham, and hence title of his book ( 1545 ), intended to mean ' lover of the bow '.
In English, which has mostly lost the case system, the definite article and noun" the car " – remain in the same form regardless of the grammatical role played by the words.
In a declined language, the morphology of the article or noun changes in some way according to the grammatical role played by the noun in a given sentence.
Standard Danish has two genders and the definite form of nouns is formed by the use of suffixes, while Western Jutlandic has only one gender and the definite form of nouns uses an article before the noun itself, in the same fashion as West Germanic languages.
In Russian and Swiss German, for example, the verb " to call ( by telephone )" is always followed by a noun in the dative.
Student reliance on BlitzMail ( known colloquially as " Blitz ," which functions as both noun and verb ) is reflected by the presence of about 100 public computer terminals intended specifically for BlitzMail use.
:( noun ) a specification of an object, manifested by an agent, intended to accomplish goals, in a particular environment, using a set of primitive components, satisfying a set of requirements, subject to constraints ;
Possession is shown by the clitic -' s attached to a possessive noun phrase, rather than by declension of the noun itself.
Brentano argued that we can join the concept represented by a noun phrase " an A " to the concept represented by an adjective " B " to give the concept represented by the noun phrase " a B-A ".
The nominalist approach is to argue that certain noun phrases can be " eliminated " by rewriting a sentence in a form that has the same meaning, but does not contain the noun phrase.

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