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Definition of Linguistic relation
1. Noun. A relation between linguistic forms or constituents.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Linguistic Relation
Literary usage of Linguistic relation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Psychology and the Teacher by Hugo Münsterberg (1909)
"This linguistic relation is as important for the formal knowledge of man as the
mathematical relation is for the formal knowledge of things. ..."
2. The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries by John Austin Stevens, Benjamin Franklin DeCosta, Martha Joanna Lamb, Henry Phelps Johnston, Nathan Gilbert Pond, William Abbatt (1888)
"As before stated, the tradition which brings them originally from the southeast
cannot stand the test of thorough criticism, as their linguistic relation to ..."
3. The History of North America by Guy Carleton Lee, Francis Newton Thorpe (1905)
"The Indians of the Shoshoni group interest philologists because of their now
generally conceded linguistic relation to the Nahuatlan stock, which includes ..."
4. Psychological Review by American Psychological Association (1907)
"This linguistic relation corresponds precisely to the psychological. Acknowledgment
and disavowal both represent the explicit judgmental acts by which a ..."
5. The Journal of American Folk-lore by American Folklore Society (1917)
"While the linguistic relation of these interdictions is easily grasped, it is
not apparent, however, or obscured in the following cases. ..."
6. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences by New York Academy of Sciences (1915)
"... who claim linguistic relation with the Bannock, had been in recent contact
with the Shoshone on the east, and Washo and Pitt River Indians on the west, ..."
7. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1898)
"And as the Umbrians were a people who from archaeological discoveries and from
linguistic relation appear to have been a branch of the Aryan stock, ..."