intentional

名词 n. 形容词 adj.
/ɪnˈtɛnʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰɛnʃənɫ̩]    /ɪnˈtɛnʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰɛnʃənɫ̩]|/ɪnˈtenʃənəl/|[ɪnˈtʰenʃənɫ̩]

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. Something that has no essential underlying structure but apparition only as defined by perception; object only because consciousness is directed to it. archaic
  2. 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.
  1. Intended or planned; done deliberately or voluntarily.
  2. 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.
  3. Done with intent.
  4. Object to intention, only appearing due to wilful perception. obsolete

词形变化

more intentional comparative most intentional superlative intentionals plural

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.
0 次浏览 数据来源: Wiktionary