释义 |
desiderative /dɪˈzɪd(ə)rətɪv / /dɪˈsɪd(ə)rətɪv/adjective Grammar1(In Latin and other inflected languages) denoting a verb formed from another and expressing a desire to do the act denoted by the root verb (such as Latin esurire ‘want to eat’, from edere ‘eat’).An interrogative use of shall with the first person subject forms what we might call desiderative....- Furthermore, I claim that even the advanced learners sometimes misuse the desiderative expressions when they forget to control their speech.
- This traditional interpretation had to be systematically verified for two reasons: the first was to explain the specificity of the category desiderative inside the complex verbal system of Vedic, and the second was the need to elucidate its historical links, currently claimed by most Indo-Europeanists, with other formally similar categories like the future in Old Greek and Celtic.
1.1Having, expressing, or relating to desire.In themselves, attention, interest, vivid presence to consciousness and the like would seem to be features of our emotional and desiderative biographies....- Since each such change seems rationally required, the new desiderative profile will seem not just different from the old, but better; more rational.
- But many of the same issues arise for desiderative conceptions of the good as well, and it will be useful to discuss these at points.
noun GrammarA desiderative verb.And the data also shows that the learner misunderstands how to make the Japanese desideratives polite....- Like causatives and desideratives, denominatives follow the inflection of thematic verbs of the Present System.
- One set of constructions-motion auxiliaries, desideratives, and reflexive causatives-involve linking to the internal a-subject.
OriginMid 16th century: from late Latin desiderativus, from Latin desiderat- 'desired', from the verb desiderare (see desiderate). |