paradigm

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
14
Words With Friends
17
Letters
8
Pronunciation
/ˈpæɹ.ə.daɪm/(UK)
See all 7 pronunciations
/ˈpæɹ.ə.daɪm/(UK) · /ˈpæɹ.ə.daɪm/ · /ˈpɛɹ.ə.daɪm/ · [ˈpɛɹ.daɪm] · /ˈpeɪ.ɹə.daɪm/ · /ˈpæɹ.ə.dɑem/ · [ˈpɛɹ.ə.dɑe̯m]

Definition of paradigm

3 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. A pattern, a way of doing something; especially a pattern of thought, a system of beliefs, a conceptual framework.
    “Near-synonyms: style, model, worldview”
    “Thomas Kuhn's landmark “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions” got people talking about paradigm shifts, to the point the word itself now suggests an incomplete or biased perspective.”
    “At times, the assimilationist paradigm has facilitated the physical dispossession of Native lands and the suppression or eradication of Native institutions, culture, and identity by the political branches of the federal government.”
See all 3 definitions

noun

  1. A pattern, a way of doing something; especially a pattern of thought, a system of beliefs, a conceptual framework.
    “Near-synonyms: style, model, worldview”
    “Thomas Kuhn's landmark “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions” got people talking about paradigm shifts, to the point the word itself now suggests an incomplete or biased perspective.”
    “At times, the assimilationist paradigm has facilitated the physical dispossession of Native lands and the suppression or eradication of Native institutions, culture, and identity by the political branches of the federal government.”
  2. An example serving as the model for such a pattern; an exceptionally good or prototypical example of a pattern or group.
    “Near-synonyms: template, exemplar, archetype, poster child; see also Thesaurus:exemplar, Thesaurus:model”
    “According to the Fourth Circuit, “Coca-Cola” is “the paradigm of a descriptive mark that has acquired secondary meaning”.”
    “DRT is a paradigm example of a dynamic semantic theory, […]”
  3. A set of all forms which contain a common element, especially the set of all inflectional forms of a word or a particular grammatical category.
    “The paradigm of "to sing" is "sing, sang, sung". The verb "to ring" follows the same paradigm.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English paradygme, from Late Latin paradīgma, from Ancient Greek παράδειγμα (parádeigma, “pattern”), from παραδείκνυμι (paradeíknumi, “I show [beside] or compare”) + -μα (-ma, suffix forming nouns concerning the results of actions). Doublet of paradigma.

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

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