principal part
English
Etymology
Calque of Late Latin principālis pars
Noun
principal part (plural principal parts)
- (grammar, usually in the plural) Any of the forms of a word which contain its stem(s) in the simplest form, or such a form that, when taken with all the other principal parts (showing various inflections), allows the entire paradigm to be derived.
- Holonyms: declension, conjugation
- (mathematics) A polynomial approximation of a power series, made up of monomials whose indices lie in the Newton diagram of the power series and which occur with the same coefficients as in the original power series.
- (mathematics) The portion of a Laurent series that has negative exponents.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see principal, part.
Usage notes
- In Latin grammar: the two principal parts of a noun are the singular nominative and the singular genitive; the three of an adjective are the masculine, the feminine, and the neuter singular nominatives; and the four of a verb are the first-person singular present active indicative, the 1st-pers. sg. perfect act. ind., the pres. act. infinitive, and the supine (or, in the case of deponent verbs, the three are the 1st-pers. sg. pres. act. ind., the pres. act. inf., and the perf. act. participle).
- In the grammars of most Germanic languages: the three principal parts of verbs are the present infinitive, the first-person singular imperfect indicative, and the passive participle.
- In English grammar: the two principal parts of a noun are the singular and the plural; the three of an adjective are the positive, the comparative, and the superlative; and the three of a verb are the infinitive, the simple past, and the past participle.
Translations
grammar: word-form containing the simplest form of a stem and/or from which the paradigm is derivable
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mathematics: polynomial approximation of a power series
mathematics: portion of a Laurent series that has negative exponents
See also
- (form of a word): lexeme
References
- A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (1st ed.), volume VII (O–P, ed. James Augustus Henry Murray, 1909), § 2 (P), page 499/1 s.v. “Part, sb. (adv.)”, sense 19.b
Further reading
- principal part (grammar) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- principal part (mathematics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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