Advertisement
Advertisement
prescriptive
[ pri-skrip-tiv ]
adjective
- that prescribes; giving directions or injunctions:
a prescriptive letter from an anxious father.
- depending on or arising from effective legal prescription, as a right or title established by a long unchallenged tenure.
prescriptive
/ prɪˈskrɪptɪv /
adjective
- making or giving directions, rules, or injunctions
- sanctioned by long-standing usage or custom
- derived from or based upon legal prescription
a prescriptive title
Derived Forms
- preˈscriptiveness, noun
- preˈscriptively, adverb
Other Words From
- pre·scrip·tive·ly adverb
- pre·scrip·tive·ness noun
- non·pre·scrip·tive adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of prescriptive1
Example Sentences
In the 2002 letter, the then Prince of Wales said to a senior UK government minister that “more prescriptive laws” were creating “increasing difficulty in many walks of life”.
You describe how you finally lost weight yet seem wary of being prescriptive.
Those depictions weren’t always positive, and locals still face discrimination and prescriptive gender roles.
The findings suggest there should be less effort put into teaching prescriptive, "one-word-fits-all" principles, and more focus on how to be sensitive to the particulars of a situation.
“The rules and regulations around these leagues are really prescriptive,” Reynolds said.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse