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lexical

adjective

  1. lexical (concerning vocabulary)
  2. lexical (concerning dictionaries)
L14836 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈlɛksɪkəl/

adj

Etymology: From Latin lexis, from Ancient Greek λέξις (léxis, “word”) + -al.

  1. Concerning the vocabulary, words, sentences or morphemes of a language.

    So, it seems clear that the idiosyncratic restrictions relating to the range of complements which a Preposition does or does not permit are directly analo- gous to the parallel restrictions which hold in the case of Verbs. The restric- tions concerned are not categorial in nature (i.e. they are not associated with every single item belonging to a given category): on the contrary, they are lexical in nature (that is to say, they are properties of individual lexical items, so that different words belonging to the same category permit a different range of complements).

  2. Concerning lexicography or a lexicon or dictionary.
  3. Denoting a content word as opposed to a function word.

    a lexical verb

  4. Relating to alphabetical order or a generalization thereof.