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derivation Used in two senses: (a) the historical development of a form; (b) morphological derivation or the creation of a form on the basis of another.
Ãâó: www.cus.cam.ac.uk/~cjp16/spanish/linggloss.htm
derivation The action of defining a datatype by using the definition of one or several other datatypes. Simple datatypes may be defined by derivation by restriction, list, or union, while complex datatypes can be defined by derivation by restriction or extension.
Ãâó: www.en8848.com/Reilly%20Books/xml/schema/gloss.htm
derivation The word forming process that creates a new base from an underlying base. A derivational affiix ultimately affects the lexical meaning of a derived stem. A derivational affix is adjoined to a base; if the base has lexical meaning, it is then a stem.
Ãâó: www.sfu.ca/person/dearmond/323/definitions.323.htm
derivation is the process of adding a morpheme to a base by which the meaning and/or wordclass of the base changes.
Ãâó: www.spectrum.uni-bielefeld.de/Courses/Summer02/How...
derivation Accepted philological conclusions are utilized for classifying separate uses of the same word as of similar or different derivation. This is purely a matter of convenience, and the rulings must seem arbitrary to a foreigner where historical data are relied on. Thus relay', s. and 'relay', v. are of separate derivation, the one being from the Fr. relaise, and the other a compound of re- and lay, while 'cross', s. and 'cross', adj. are of the same derivation. ...
Ãâó: ogden.basic-english.org/dictionary.html
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