asseverative

English

Etymology

asseverate + -ive

Adjective

asseverative (comparative more asseverative, superlative most asseverative)

  1. Characterized by asseveration; asserting positively.
  2. (linguistics) Serving to emphasize the certainty or truth of a statement.
    • 1990, Bruce K. Waltke, ‎Michael Patrick O'Connor, An Introduction to Biblical Hebrew Syntax, page 211:
      Further, it is strongly possible that the emphatic or asseverative lamed is etymologically distinct from the preposition, though the Masoretes do not distinguish the two.
    • 2013, William M. Schniedewind, A Social History of Hebrew:, page 152:
      A prosthetic 'aleph was added in Hebrew [] and this gave a graphemic distinction between the negative and the asseverative, but the asseverative nevertheless eventually disappeared in Hebrew and other Canaanite dialects.
    • 2018, Eran Cohen, The Modal System of Old Babylonian:
      Delimiting the forms which belong to the asseverative paradigm can be achieved only for some of the forms based on morphological criteria alone.

Derived terms

Noun

asseverative (plural asseveratives)

  1. (linguistics) A linguistic structure that serves to emphasize the certainty or truth of a statement.

Italian

Adjective

asseverative

  1. feminine plural of asseverativo
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