1) analytic. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth
Edition. 2000. ...1. Of or relating to analysis or analytics. 2. Dividing into elemental parts or basic principles. 3. Reasoning or acting from a perception of the parts and interrelations... 2) Chapter 6. Types of Linguistic Structure. Edward Sapir. 1921. Language: An
Introduction to the Study of Speech ...that general type. Incidentally we have observed that one language runs to tight-knit synthesis where another contents itself with a more analytic, piece-meal handling... 3) analytic philosophy. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. ...school of the 20th century whose central methodology is the analysis of concepts or language. Leading practitioners have included Bertrand Russell, George Edward... 4) analytic geometry. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. ...The analysis of geometric structures and properties principally by algebraic operations on variables defined in terms of position coordinates.... 5) analytic psychology. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. ...The theory of psychoanalysis developed by Carl Jung that focuses on the concept of the collective unconscious and the importance of balancing opposing forces within... 6) Quine, Willard van Orman. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. ...American analytic philosopher and logician whose major writings, including Word and Object (1960), concern issues of language and meaning.... 7) Davidson, Donald. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...has emerged as one of the major figures in post-World War II analytic philosophy. He has developed a philosophy of language, a central tenet of which is that knowing... 8) 33284. Kripke, Saul. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996 ...and be known to be such. ATTRIBUTION:Saul Kripke (b. 1940), U.S. analytic philosopher. repr. In Semantics and Natural Language, D. Davidson and Harmon. Naming and... 9) §4. Changes in grammar. XV. Changes in the Language since
Shakespeare s Time. Vol. 14. The Victorian Age, Part Two. The Cambridge
History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen
Volumes. 1907–21 ...have survived, yet, compared with Old English, the present-day language has been justly designated one of lost inflections. It is analytic, and not synthetic. This... 10) 33286. Kripke, Saul. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996 ...gave the apparatus its point. ATTRIBUTION:Saul Kripke (b. 1940), U.S. analytic philosopher. repr. In Semantics and Natural Language, D. Davidson and Harmon. Naming... |