Sentence examples similar to cognate term from inspiring English sources

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Note that throughout this entry 'science' and cognate terms encompass only the natural sciences.

Latin origins in verbs tied to (3) may leave traces in nonaffective uses of "pleasure" and cognate terms.

2. Unless otherwise indicated, the term "constitutional" (and its cognate terms "constitutionalism", "constitution", and so on) should henceforth be understood to carry this richer meaning.

12. Henceforth, and unless otherwise indicated, all uses of the word 'constitution' (and cognate terms) should be understood as referring to constitutional law.

But here the difficulty lies partly in the fact that the relevant use of cognate terms is simply not that found in common speech (as when we speak of doing something 'intentionally'intentionally

Other evidence for early agriculture includes cognate terms for agricultural activities such as planting, terms for stages of grain production such as unhusked grain/husked grain/cooked grain, terms for agricultural implements such as dibbling sticks, and terms for foods made from grains.

On the other hand, Ibn Kammuna does employ in the shorter work several cognate terms to describe the person who can grasp a certain fact immediately and without the need for lengthy demonstration: dhihn salim ("healthy mind," Pourjavady & Schmidtke 2006, 188), dhu fitana ("clever," Pourjavady & Schmidtke 2006, 189), dhu lubb ("understanding," Pourjavady & Schmidtke 2006, 189).

Butler uses benevolence mainly to refer to a particular passion or a cluster of passions (McNaughton 1992), although sometimes he also refers to it and cognate terms ("love of thy neighbor") as principles that might have particular passions as their objects.

The Old English cognate terms wælcyrge and wælcyrie appear in several Old English manuscripts, and scholars have explored whether the terms appear in Old English by way of Norse influence, or reflect a tradition also native among the Anglo-Saxon pagans.

Yet the names of these forest trees in the Sirionó vocabulary, in a statistically significant proportion, seem to be cognate with terms for the same species in numerous other Tupi-Guarani languages, including several of those of eastern Amazonia, by using a comparative method.

We show that the degree of cross-linguistic overlap varies, such that words can be more or less "cognate," in terms of their phonological and semantic overlap.

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