Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for reduplicative. Search instead for reduplicatively.

reduplicative

American  
[ri-doo-pli-key-tiv, -dyoo-] / rɪˈdu plɪˌkeɪ tɪv, -ˈdyu- /

adjective

  1. tending to reduplicate.

  2. pertaining to or marked by reduplication.


Other Word Forms

  • reduplicatively adjective

Etymology

Origin of reduplicative

First recorded in 1560–70; reduplicate + -ive

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Katherine Martin, the head of U.S. dictionaries at Oxford, recalls that Scalia pulled a similar trick in 2013, when he used the “colorful reduplicative colloquialism” argle-bargle.

From Time

In another case of Morvan’s, the patient reported reduplicative paramnesia; he firmly believed that his home had been copied by a stranger and that the replica existed 40 miles away.

From Scientific American

Reduplicative paramnesia in Morvan’s syndrome.

From Scientific American

And this is either by being in that sphear omnipresent it self, as the soul is said to be in the body tota in toto & tota in qualibet parte, or else at least by propagation of rayes, which is the image of it self; and so are divers sensible objects Reduplicative, as light, colours, sounds.

From Project Gutenberg

That is reduplicative, which is not onely in this point, but also in another, having a kind of circumscribed ubiquitie, viz. in its own sphear.

From Project Gutenberg