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descriptiver

Descriptiver is a coined term used in some discussions of language, rhetoric, and text analysis to denote a person, approach, or style that emphasizes description over prescription. The term is not widely adopted in mainstream scholarship, but it appears in debates that seek to distinguish methods or attitudes that focus on detailing phenomena from those that aim to judge or regulate them.

Etymology and sense of the term derive from combining the adjective descriptive with the agentive suffix -er,

In practice, descriptiver usage can appear in two broad arenas. In linguistics or language studies, a descriptiver

Reception and use of the term are varied. Some analysts view descriptiver as a redundant or awkward

See also: descriptive linguistics, descriptivism, descriptivist, prescriptivism.

following
patterns
seen
in
words
like
describer
or
observer.
In
contrast
to
prescriptivist
or
prescriptive
approaches,
a
descriptiver
is
imagined
as
prioritizing
empirical
description,
cataloging,
and
neutral
reporting
of
how
language
is
used
or
how
scenes
are
experienced,
rather
than
prescribing
rules
or
norms.
might
refer
to
someone
who
compiles
data
on
actual
usage
and
corpus-based
patterns
without
normative
judgments.
In
rhetoric
or
literary
analysis,
descriptiver
prose
or
commentary
would
emphasize
vivid,
accurate
description
and
factual
detail
about
a
subject,
rather
than
evaluative
or
normative
commentary.
label
since
related
terms
like
descriptivist
or
descriptive
linguist
already
cover
similar
ground.
Others
see
value
in
a
distinct
term
to
highlight
a
particular
emphasis
on
descriptive
practice
without
normative
implications.