dilb. çekim örneği

listen to the pronunciation of dilb. çekim örneği
Turkish - English
{i} paradigm
An example serving as a model or pattern

DRT is a paradigm example of a dynamic semantic theory,.

A philosophy consisting of ‘top-bottom’ ideas (namely biases which could possibly make the practitioner susceptible to the ‘confirmation bias’)
A set of all forms which contain a common element, especially the set of all inflectional forms of a word or a particular grammatical category

The paradigm of go is go, went, gone..

The recipe or model that links the elements of a theory together and shows, where possible, the nature of the relationships
A model or pattern that an individual or group uses in trying to understand something Present-day biblical scholars usually name and describe the paradigm they are using when presenting their results or opinions Sometimes "paradigm" is used synonymously with "methodology," but often it has a broader connotation, more like "world-view " A hundred years ago, biblical scholarship concerned itself mostly with trying to discover the original audience, authorial intention, and historical setting of the biblical text, because people believed that only the original context could tell us what the Bible really meant Nowadays scholars are operating under a different paradigm, which believes in a multiplicity of contexts and meanings
In general, pattern, exemplar, or example (especially an outstanding or unproblematic example); more technically, a theoretical, methodological, or heuristic framework Originally meaning the exemplification of the rule, the term paradigm has become the rule that governs the example In modern structural linguistics, particularly with Roman Jakobson [253], the paradigm is defined by complementary opposition to the syntagm, the paradigmatic axis being the system of associations from which the constitutive elements of the discursive chain, or syntagm, are selected
An archetypal solution to a problem [News about the passing away of Thomas Kuhn, NY Times obituary, 19 June 1996] http: //www brint com/kuhnnews htm
(1) (Mertens, 2003) A conceptual model of a person’s worldview, complete with the assumptions that are associated with that view (2) (Caracelli and Green, 2003) paradigms are social constructions, historically and culturally embedded discourse practices, and therefore neither inviolate nor unchanging Back to the top
"A paradigm is a set of rules and regulations (written or unwritten) that does two things: 1) it establishes or defines boundaries; and 2) it tells you how to behave inside the boundaries in order to be successful" (Joel Arthur Barker) "A shared set of assumptions The paradigm is the way we perceive the world; water to the fish The paradigm explains the world to us and helps us to predict its behavior When we are in the middle of the paradigm, it is hard to imagine any other paradigm" (Adam Smith) "A paradigm is a framework of thought a scheme for understanding and explaining certain aspects of reality" (Marilyn Ferguson) From the Greek paradeigma, which means 'model, pattern, example"
An example; a model; a pattern
systematic arrangement of all the inflected forms of a word
a general agreement of belief of how the world works; what could be called ``common sense''
a standard or typical example; "he is the prototype of good breeding"; "he provided America with an image of the good father"
a theoretical framework that forms the basis for hypotheses and explanations
An example that serves as pattern or model
A paradigm is a clear and typical example of something. He had become the paradigm of the successful man
An example of a conjugation or declension, showing a word in all its different forms of inflection
A cognitive model for explaining a set of data Paradigm Shift A change in the perception of information
n A model, an example, a pattern or a mental pattern It is the makeup of an individual's, group's or nation's reality, of what their attention is focused on, and it lays out the map of how to get there from here A paradigm defines what can be perceived, what is acceptable, and what is not acceptable
Introduced by Thomas Kuhn in his 1962 work,The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, the concept of paradigm is linked to a "coherent tradition of scientific research (p 11) " Examples include Newtonian mechanics or Copernican astronomy To say that a group of scientists shares a certain paradigm means that they have a common "way of seeing the world and of practicing science in it (p 4) "