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Paradigmatische

Paradigmatische is the German adjective used in linguistics to describe paradigmatic relations within a sign system. The English equivalent is paradigm- or paradigmatic. The concept stems from structural linguistics, notably the work of Ferdinand de Saussure, who contrasted paradigmatic relations with syntagmatic relations. Paradigmatic relations concern the set of signs that could occupy the same position in a given structure, forming a paradigm.

In practice, paradigmatic relations are vertical: members of a paradigm are substitutes for one another in

Paradigmatic analysis is foundational in lexicon and morphology, aiding studies of word formation, inflectional systems, and

In German-language linguistics, paradigmatische relations are routinely described in terms of paradigms, paradigmatische Achsen, and related

the
same
functional
slot.
For
example,
in
the
sentence
“The
___
sat,”
any
of
a
set
of
nouns
such
as
cat,
dog,
or
bird
could
fill
the
blank,
forming
a
paradigm
of
possible
subjects.
Similarly,
morphological
inflection
forms—such
as
am,
are,
is
or
went,
go,
going—illustrate
how
different
forms
substitute
within
a
single
paradigm.
cross-linguistic
comparison.
It
also
features
in
semiotics
and
cognitive
linguistics,
where
the
distinction
between
paradigmatic
(substitutive)
and
syntagmatic
(combinatory)
relations
helps
model
how
signs
contribute
to
meaning
through
distribution
and
contrast
in
structure.
concepts.
The
term
emphasizes
how
units
of
language
contrast
and
substitute
for
one
another
within
a
given
position,
shaping
the
organization
of
vocabulary,
grammar,
and
meaning.