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View synonyms for paradigm

paradigm

[ par-uh-dahym, -dim ]

noun

    1. a framework containing the basic assumptions, ways of thinking, and methodology that are commonly accepted by members of a scientific community.
    2. such a cognitive framework shared by members of any discipline or group:

      The company’s business paradigm needs updating for a new generation.

  1. Informal. a general mental model or framework for anything:

    Their first album completely blew apart my paradigm for what rock music could be.

  2. an example serving as a model for others to imitate; pattern:

    Pelham Dairy’s 10-year aged cheddar is the paradigm of cheddars.

    Synonyms: touchstone, paragon, ideal, standard, mold

  3. a typical or representative instance or example:

    His experimentalism and iconoclastic attitude towards the past make Picasso a paradigm of 20th century painting.

  4. Grammar.
    1. a set of forms all of which contain a particular element, especially the set of all inflected forms based on a single stem or theme.
    2. a display in fixed arrangement of such a set, as boy, boy's, boys, boys'.


paradigm

/ ˌpærədɪɡˈmætɪk; ˈpærəˌdaɪm /

noun

  1. grammar the set of all the inflected forms of a word or a systematic arrangement displaying these forms
  2. a pattern or model
  3. a typical or stereotypical example (esp in the phrase paradigm case )
  4. (in the philosophy of science) a very general conception of the nature of scientific endeavour within which a given enquiry is undertaken


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Derived Forms

  • paradigmatic, adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of paradigm1

First recorded in 1475–85; from Late Latin paradigma “example,” from Greek parádeigma “pattern, model, precedent, example” (derivative of paradeiknýnai “to show side by side, compare”), equivalent to para- preposition and prefix + deik-, root of deiknýnai “to show, bring to light, prove” + -ma noun suffix denoting the result of an action; para- 1, deictic

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Word History and Origins

Origin of paradigm1

C15: via French and Latin from Greek paradeigma pattern, from paradeiknunai to compare, from para- 1+ deiknunai to show

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Example Sentences

You get all the advantage of a paradigm shift from jQuery to a component-based reactive library for developing cutting-edge interactivity.

Lemos believes a culture of data protection could still flourish in Brazil, in a development similar to the paradigm shift that happened after a consumer protection code was introduced in 1990 and people started to exercise their newfound rights.

Value has been experiencing a drought so deep and extended that many on Wall Street believe we’ve entered a new paradigm.

From Fortune

The goal of these efforts is essentially to squeeze real-world problems into the paradigm that other machine-learning researchers use to measure performance.

I hate to say it, but the current government seems to be trying to take us back to the old paradigm rather than a more sustainable, environmentally-friendly, let’s make agriculture do more on organic and natural processes.

“It was just another assumption based on a paradigm that marginalizes non-heterosexual people,” he writes.

Her new paradigm leads her to carve up shibboleths and heroes alike.

Kargil is a good paradigm for what a future crisis might look like.

But if “calories-in-calories-out” is a meaningful weight-loss paradigm as the show insists, then plateaus simply are not possible.

To change this paradigm, to move forward, it is critical to look back.

To complete what I said on the verb during the hearing I give here the entire paradigm of the verb in Esperanto.

Rapid Dominance also means looking to invest in technologies perhaps not fully or currently captured by the Cold War paradigm.

The orbit of Venus is now almost circular, and it affords an example of the perfect astronomical paradigm.

This perspective was an essential paradigm shift for nursing knowledge, but essential for study of the caring phenomena.

In the empathic paradigm, the subjectivity of the other is "assumed to be as whole and valid as that of the caregiver" (p. 68).

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