English to Urdu Dictionary referential

referential

حوالہ
definition
adjective
As both message and context, nature can manifest the referential function.
containing or of the nature of references or allusions.
K. Anthony Appiah argues that racial ascriptions are problematic whether one adopts an ideational or a referential theory of language.
of or relating to a referent, in particular having the external world rather than a text or language as a referent.
example
Even the earlier buildings are 'referential' , trying to create meaning in this New World by referring to an imaginary old one.
This is one of the things that really bugs me: so much of this stuff is 'referential' , and always to one place.
The everyday is dilated and takes on further meaning, both abstract and 'referential' .
It is these 'referential' touches that enhance the movie.
As both message and context, nature can manifest the 'referential' function.
Maybe she has decided her column should replicate a blog post that synthesises a number of sources (but without the 'referential' hyperlinks)?
Based on the Elena Stancanelli novel, the feature riffs beautifully on various bits of pop and film history, but never feels like a cheap ripoff, or like a work that rests on its 'referential' laurels.
There is an intuition that indefinites have specific readings in which they are 'referential' and where the speaker can identify the referent, but the hearer cannot.
The 'referential' type of thing is what excites me.
While the poems are often wild as usual, their 'referential' reach is bound by the subject of the volume.
Another piece of evidence that supported the study was that male talk tends to be more 'referential' or informative, while female talk is more supportive and facilitative.
As with Yojimbo and Sanjuro, Seven Samurai is, on a purely 'referential' level of story and plot, about samurai warriors saving peasants.
The map is a 'referential' structure; inside a coordinate system all can be referenced laying the gridwork for reality.
The Walkers' art balances on a line between 'referential' and impenetrable, sometimes falling on the wrong side of that line.
Ten or 15 years ago, this would have been a very different book, full of the 'referential' jokiness of postmodernism.
Shades of Mahler and Shostakovich flit through the texture in which dissonances set against a tonally 'referential' idiom and allusions to earlier styles are set within absolute musical structures.
The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe is only part of Lewis's multi-layered seven-volume fiction, and like most 'referential' treatments of classic literature, it is overlong and sometimes awkward.
To have allowed the actual, the almost-representational and the 'referential' , into his frames is already a considerable move for Shreshtha.
Before identifying a paradigmatic text on which to focus, a basic understanding of the 'referential' patterns in audience attitudes toward age, gender, and romance in screen cultures was sought.
Now, everyone seems to agree about where the basic 'referential' morphemes here come from.
Almodóvar is one wildly 'referential' director, riding pop culture throughout this Bad Education.
In language, the words we deal with do have 'referential' meaning which extends beyond this closed logical system.
It was surely from Rothko, though, that he learned the profound truth that a simple shape can be not merely 'referential' to the observed world but can in itself sum up and communicate human ideas.
K. Anthony Appiah argues that racial ascriptions are problematic whether one adopts an ideational or a 'referential' theory of language.
The other way to think of music is in its own terms - not 'referential' to anything else.
The more particular criticism seems to be that the 'referentiality' is something that panders to the intelligence of the audience, that falsely congratulates them on being so well-informed.
On the other hand the reference value might be 'referentially' atomic, meaning that it has no particular internal structural relation to any other reference values; maybe it is used as an index in an association list.
Certainly, an introductory survey needs to account for these texts, summarise their content and aims, and use them 'referentially' as an argument progresses.
Logophoric pronouns are semantically stronger than regular pronouns in that syntactically, they usually require to be bound in a local domain, and semantically, they are canonically 'referentially' dependent.
Would the speakers of such a language be prohibited from using their descriptions 'referentially' ?
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