temporostructural
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- temporo-structural
Etymology
[edit]From temporo- + structural.
Pronunciation
[edit]IPA(key): /ˌtɛmpəroʊˈstrʌktʃərəl/
Adjective
[edit]temporostructural (comparative more temporostructural, superlative most temporostructural)
- Relating to the structure of something and its relationship with time.
- 2019, Meg Jensen, The Art and Science of Trauma and the Autobiographical: Negotiated Truths (Palgrave Studies in Life Writing), Springer, page 186:
- A further example of this temporo-structural fragmentation in Epileptic can be found in the multiple dreams and (often violent) fantasies that invade the present-day of the telling.
- 2020 May 11, Barbara Molony, Kathleen Uno, editors, Gendering Modern Japanese History (Harvard East Asian Monographs; 251), reprint edition, BRILL, page 196:
- Even when we relax the “provincializing Europe” strictures of postcolonial critique and history somewhat and grant a provisional temporostructural priority to certain aspects of European sexological thought, poststructural thought can still offer a caveat lector.
- 2025 February 3, Wikipedia contributors, “Chronometry”, in English Wikipedia[1], Wikimedia Foundation:
- Reaction time models and the process of expressing the temporostructural organisation of human processing mechanisms have an innate computational essence to them.