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connective
/ ˌkɒnɛkˈtɪvɪtɪ; kəˈnɛktɪv /
adjective
- serving to connect or capable of connecting
noun
- a thing that connects
- grammar logic
- a less common word for conjunction
- any word that connects phrases, clauses, or individual words
- a symbol used in a formal language in the construction of compound sentences from simpler sentences, corresponding to terms such as or, and, not, etc, in ordinary speech
- botany the tissue of a stamen that connects the two lobes of the anther
- anatomy a nerve-fibre bundle connecting two nerve centres
Derived Forms
- DzˈԱپ, adverb
- connectivity, noun
Other yvlog Forms
- Dz·Աt· adverb
- Dz·Ա·پ··ٲ [kon-ek-, tiv, -i-tee], noun
- ԴDzcDz·Աt adjective noun
- nonDz·Աt· adverb
- ԴDzcDz·Ա·پi·ٲ noun
- cDz·Աt adjective
- ܲȴ-Dz·Աt adjective
- quasi-Dz·Աt· adverb
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of connective1
Example Sentences
“The Palisades rec center for me and my family represents like the connective tissue of the community, if that makes sense,” JJ said.
It serves as a connective bridge between two periods of her career that would allow her fans to cross over with her.
“To Star,” Mia Scarpa’s solo show at John Doe, is the latest example of the artist’s work as highly specific, highly personal and immediately connective.
It’s easier to enjoy the film as a political drama about deep-state mind control with a few superpowered individuals than it is as an overly strained bit of connective tissue in the MCU.
But so much of the sort of sinew or the connective tissue between scenes and sequences comes from a process of yes and, yes and, yes and, which is the first rule of improv.
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