- a
possessor noun
often takes on a
special morphological form,
which is
termed the
construct state (Latin
status constructus). For example, in Arabic...
-
Construct,
Constructs or
constructs may
refer to:
Construct (information technology), a
collection of
logic components forming an
interactive agent or...
- A
language construct is a
syntactically allowable part of a
program that may be
formed from one or more
lexical tokens in
accordance with the
rules of...
-
Construct validity is the ac****ulation of
evidence to
support the
interpretation of what a
measure reflects.
Modern validity theory defines construct...
- that are not
socially constructed, such as, arguably,
facts about physical particles – or
institutional facts (which are
formed from
social conventions)...
- In philosophy, a
construct is an
object which is ideal, that is, an
object of the mind or of thought,
meaning that its
existence may be said to depend...
-
possession and
direct objects. They are also used for the
construct noun
form. The
letters which form these suffixes (excluding plurals) are
called "formative...
- Otherwise, the
pausal form of the
original oblique case has been
usually generalized to all
cases (however, in "long
construct" nouns, it is nominative...
-
occurs in a
phonologically reduced, "
construct"
form and is
followed by the
possessor noun in its normal, "absolute"
form.
Pronominal direct objects are either...
- delving. The
construct is also used for
compounding words, in
which it is the
composition state,
which may nor not be
different to the
construct form based on...