inflected


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Related to inflected: Inflected language
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Antonyms for inflected

(of the voice) altered in tone or pitch

Antonyms

showing alteration in form (especially by the addition of affixes)

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Meanwhile, the Air Force also inflected three strikes on terrorist Dsh elements in Alqragol and Yousufiyah districts, killing 18 terrorists and injuring 30 others.
Consider, for example, that while he rejects teaching intelligent design and Creationism as alternatives to evolution, he also warns teachers to avoid criticizing religiously inflected beliefs, including Creationism and Intelligent Design.
The occurrence of the "inflected subjunctive", though always in a subordinate clause, is not limited to the protasis of conditionals.
Deeply inflected without being maudlin or slipping into current R & B loverman cliches is Edler's strong suit.
Here again, Alexander places her work in the tradition epitomized by Robert Hayden's "Middle Passage." The difference, however, is that Alexander's history of the Amistad is updated and imagined through a blues inflected lens.
The multiple paradoxes of our post-Soviet age are encapsulated within the show's largest piece, Platform (proposal), 2005, a pyramidal structure modeled on a design for a people's theater, transplanted from revolutionary Russia in order to serve as a platform for a brand of "folksy" rhetoric perhaps inflected with traces of Bolshevik naturalism.
Interestingly, the dialect in its simplicity conforms not to the realities of the speech of peoples like the Xhosa or the Aleuts, whose syntax is very highly inflected, but projects forward the eight-hundred-year trend of English itself toward the dropping of forms.
Are the words not only correct, but also pronounced accurately and clearly, and are they inflected appropriately and expressively?
My first challenge was to let patients know that they were inflected with HCV.
Deploying Hans Blumenberg's "metaphorology," as inflected by new historicism and the Bourdieuvian theory of "practice," the author organizes his discussion around four "absolute metaphors"--voyage, cosmos, theater, and market--said to "mediat[e] conceptual understanding of the world" in this period (22).
Occupying almost half of South America's landmass, this fifth-largest country in the world has its own rhythms, culture and language, Portuguese inflected with idioms from its African and Indian roots.
polyptoton Late Latin, from Greek polypto^Oton, neuter of polypto^Otos using many inflected forms (of the same word), from poly- many + -pto^Otos, a derivative of ptosis accidence, inflection, literally, the act of falling
Part of the Germanic group of Indo - European languages, Old English was a highly inflected language with four major dialect divisions: Kentish, Mercian, Northumbrian, and West Saxon.
Wedbush analyst Jen Redding raised her price target for Burlington Stores to $162 from $155 saying that her proprietary model for Campaign data positively inflected in Q1, reversing the negative trend forecasted into Q4, and indicating potential for upside to management's guidance reflective of turbulence in the beginning of the quarter.
The source said to the reporter of the National Iraqi News Agency / Nina /: "The Army Aviation inflected air strikes on Dsh elements sites inside orchards areas around Nofal village near Muqdadiyah district northeast of Baquba, killing four elements and destroying a den and two vehicles ." / End