intentional
名词 n.
形容词 adj.
英 /ɪnˈtɛnʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰɛnʃənɫ̩]
美 /ɪnˈtɛnʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰɛnʃənɫ̩]|/ɪnˈtenʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰenʃənɫ̩]
英文释义
名词 n.
- Something that has no essential underlying structure but apparition only as defined by perception; object only because consciousness is directed to it.
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The cohortative mood as found in Hebrew (terminology borrowed from Julius Friedrich Böttcher † 1863 and now outmoded), and constructions of similar purpose in even more exotic languages.
— Tariana distinguishes interrogative and imperative moods. Interrogative mood is marked through a separate set of evidentials fused with tense (see §14.2). Imperatives are discussed in §16.1. Modalities include: frustrative (§16.2), intentional (§16.3), apprehensive (§16.4), uncertainty (§16.5), conditional (§16.6), purposive (§16.7) and counter-expectation (§16.8). […] The intentional is marked with the clitic -kasu. It can occur with any group of verbs, marking imminent action, as in 16.60 and intention, as in 16.61.
形容词 adj.
- Intended or planned; done deliberately or voluntarily.
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Reflecting intention; marking an expenditure of will in the shape of a matter.
— It should, however, be borne in mind that even in the cohortative proper, the -ah does not add to the simple imperfect the ‘intentional’ signification expressed by that mood: the signification is already there, and the new termination merely renders it more prominent.
- Done with intent.
- Object to intention, only appearing due to wilful perception.
词汇关系
近义词
下位词
词源
词源 1
Borrowed from Medieval Latin intentiōnālis. By surface analysis, intention + -al.
词源 2
Borrowed from Medieval Latin intentiōnālis. By surface analysis, intention + -al.
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数据来源: Wiktionary