function word - traduction vers néerlandais
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function word - traduction vers néerlandais

WORDS WITH LITTLE/AMBIGUOUS LEXICAL MEANING THAT EXPRESS GRAMMATICAL RELATIONSHIPS OR SPECIFY THE SPEAKER’S ATTITUDE/MOOD OF THE SPEAKER; E.G. ARTICLES, PRONOUNS, ADPOSITIONS, CONJUNCTIONS, AUXILIARY VERBS, INTERJECTIONS, PARTICLES
Function words; Grammatical word; Grammatical words; Lexical words; Grammar words; Structure word

function word         
n. woord dat voornamelijk grammaticale verwantschap aanduidt (zoals hulpwerkwoord, voorzetsel en verbindingswoord)
mathematical function         
  • A binary operation is a typical example of a bivariate function which assigns to each pair <math>(x, y)</math> the result <math>x\circ y</math>.
  • A function that associates any of the four colored shapes to its color.
  • Together, the two square roots of all nonnegative real numbers form a single smooth curve.
  • Graph of a linear function
  • The function mapping each year to its US motor vehicle death count, shown as a [[line chart]]
  • The same function, shown as a bar chart
  • Graph of a polynomial function, here a quadratic function.
  • Graph of two trigonometric functions: [[sine]] and [[cosine]].
  • right
ASSOCIATION OF A SINGLE OUTPUT TO EACH INPUT
Mathematical Function; Mathematical function; Function specification (mathematics); Mathematical functions; Empty function; Function (math); Ambiguous function; Function (set theory); Function (Mathematics); Functions (mathematics); Domain and range; Functional relationship; G(x); H(x); Function notation; Output (mathematics); Ƒ(x); Overriding (mathematics); Overriding union; F of x; Function of x; Bivariate function; Functional notation; Function of several variables; Y=f(x); ⁡; Draft:The Repeating Fractional Function; Image (set theory); Mutivariate function; Draft:Specifying a function; Function (maths); Functions (math); Functions (maths); F(x); Empty map; Function evaluation
wiskundige funktie
word length         
BASE MEMORY UNIT HANDLED BY A COMPUTER
Computer word; Word size; Word length; Wordlength; 10-bit; Halfword; Dword (Computer); Qword; Machine word; DWORD; DWord; Dword; Data word; Double word; Word orientation; Word-oriented; Word oriented; Word (unit); Word (data type); Word width; Memory word; Bitness; Binary word; Variable word-length computer; Variable word-length architecture; Variable word-length machine; Variable word length architecture; Variable word length computer; Variable word length machine; Variable word architecture; Variable word-length (computer hardware); Variable word length (computer hardware); 32-bit word; 32bit word; Catena (unit); Catena (computing); Catenae (unit); Catenae (computing); Storage word; 16-bit word; 16 bit word; 32 bit word; 48-bit word; 48 bit word; 51 bit word; 51-bit word; 60-bit word; 60 bit word; 64 bit word; 64-bit word; 96 bit word; 96-bit word; Word size (computing); Quarterword; Variable word length; Fullword; Kiloword
woordlengte (grootte van informatie-basiseenheid (geen vaste grootte) (in computers))

Définition

function word
¦ noun Linguistics a word whose purpose is to contribute to the syntax rather than the meaning of a sentence, for example do in we do not live here.

Wikipédia

Function word

In linguistics, function words (also called functors) are words that have little lexical meaning or have ambiguous meaning and express grammatical relationships among other words within a sentence, or specify the attitude or mood of the speaker. They signal the structural relationships that words have to one another and are the glue that holds sentences together. Thus they form important elements in the structures of sentences.

Words that are not function words are called content words (or open class words, lexical words, or autosemantic words) and include nouns, most verbs, adjectives, and most adverbs although some adverbs are function words (like then and why). Dictionaries define the specific meanings of content words but can describe only the general usages of function words. By contrast, grammars describe the use of function words in detail but treat lexical words only in general terms.

Since it was first proposed in 1952 by C. C. Fries, the distinguishing of function/structure words from content/lexical words has been highly influential in the grammar used in second-language acquisition and English-language teaching.