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expressive

adjective

  1. emotionally clear
L33010 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ɪkˈspɹɛsɪv/ / /ɛkˈspɹɛsɪv/ / /ɛkˈspɹæsɛv/

adj

Etymology: From Middle French expressif.

  1. Effectively conveying thought or feeling.

    expressive dancing

    a gesture expressive of the utmost contempt

  2. Conveying the speaker's emotions and/or attitudes, in addition to the denotative or literal meaning.

    These adults performed significantly more poorly than a group of 28 control adults on all measures of articulation and expressive and receptive language.

    This volume provides a detailed account of the syntax of expressive language, that is, utterances that express, rather than describe, the emotions and attitudes of the speaker.

  3. Able to represent a number of ideas or concepts.

    A programming language that is Turing complete is more expressive than one that is not.

noun

Etymology: From Middle French expressif.

  1. Any word or phrase that expresses (that the speaker, writer, or signer has) a certain attitude toward or information about the referent.

    Consider the case of expressives, where no prior knowledge of the speaker’s attitudes are required to interpret the utterance. In (43) ["That jerk Alexa keeps making me look bad"], Steve does not need to know (and in fact has no prior knowledge of) anything relating to Siri’s attitudes towards Alexa to interpret that Siri has a negative attitude about Alexa. It is the expressive that jerk that implies the negative attitude.

  2. A word or phrase, belonging to a distinct word class or having distinct morphosyntactic properties, with semantic symbolism (for example, an onomatopoeia), variously considered either a synonym, a hypernym or a hyponym of ideophone.

    Cross-linguistically 'expressives' are more commonly termed 'ideophones' [...] Expressives are often cited as a distinctive shared feature of the Austroasiatic language family (Diffloth and Zide 1992; Osada 1992 (Mundari); Svantesson 1983 (Kammu)). [...] I do not make a distinction between expressives and ideophones. [...] I distinguish expressives from onomatopoeic forms, although the two probably overlap.

    A native metalinguistic term toongl-toojl covers most of these, capturing a range of phenomena associated with alliterative, sound symbolic, and poetic expression. This chapter describes expressive structures under the headings ideophones, onomatopoeia, four-syllable rhyming expressions, echo formation, and interjections. 12.1 Ideophones The term ideophone is roughly equivalent to the term expressive, as well as other terms mimetic and psychomime.