Linguistic in a sentence as an adjective

My reaction to your use of "*******" wasn't that it appalled me in some moralistic or linguistic sense.

It's linguistic profiling, and it's the only reasonable way to enforce the export law.

Recommendation: delete all the linguistic posturing and get down to the hard work of casting light on your ideas.

And then there's all these boxes he seems like he just sort of hand-waves, like "baseline linguistic semantic engine," whatever the **** that means.

"In order to be granted a .cat domain, one needs to belong to the Catalan linguistic and cultural community on the Internet.

'It's very difficult for a claim that contains a linguistic asymptote to be true, but it's cognitively very easy to understand and process.

Greetings from a speaker of a linguistic oddity that doesn't have a universal form of the word "you".My native language -- Sinhalese -- has two forms: written and spoken.

Folk didn't adopt PHP because of some hand-wavy, post hoc, revisionist ******** about linguistic evolution.

It is a group that people identify with, normally composed based on ethnic, linguistic, or religious similarity.

It's unfortunate that the article doesn't try to actually make the case for the primacy of linguistic communication, and I'm not going to take the time to do it here either.

She told him that it had to be ‘a great green dragon’, but when he asked her why, she couldn’t answer, thereby starting him down the road of puzzling over matters linguistic and philologic his whole life long.

I really didn't expect to read a conclusion like this in an article about prairie dog linguistic research: This article has summarized groundbreaking research that reveals sophisticated language use by the prairie dog.

Surely, even a higher level of design and intelligence would be required to enable the incredibly more complex linguistic abilities of mankind as spiritual children of the Living God.

It also happens to mean that you can test it without requiring the linguistic flexibility provided by Ruby, but that doesn't mean that testability in inflexible languages is the only reason why it's the right thing to do.

The models we create to explain observed phenomena are not direct reflections of reality, they are simply characteristically human, linguistic models that correspond to our observations.

Linguistic definitions

adjective

consisting of or related to language; "linguistic behavior"; "a linguistic atlas"; "lingual diversity"

See also: lingual

adjective

of or relating to the scientific study of language; "linguistic theory"