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articulated
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
articulated
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
clearly
▪ This is in spite of the existence of clearly articulated curriculum materials and guidelines.
▪ The professional responds to clearly articulated needs.
▪ The measurement of frequency depends on the existence of a clearly articulated set of linguistic and stylistic categories.
■ NOUN
lorry
▪ We had scarcely survived a convoy of high articulated lorries to reach the safety of a country lane.
▪ You could have driven an articulated lorry up the leg.
▪ The modern articulated lorry was born at Wolverton Works.
▪ His car was involved in in collision with an articulated lorry.
▪ I cut up articulated lorries, rashly overtake, and dash through traffic lights when they're more red than amber.
▪ He got run over by an articulated lorry.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The X-ray device sits at the end of an articulated arm.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He was a loosely articulated dummy with a roughly carved face.
▪ More expensive items in the same range should be finely knotted and possess cleanly articulated and symmetrically arranged decorative forms.
▪ One of the biggest articulated vehicles on the road, the 44-foot long unit replaces an ageing, converted lorry trailer.
▪ The modern articulated lorry was born at Wolverton Works.
▪ Therefore it remains for us to sketch out a more articulated theory based upon Bukharin's ideas of disproportionality and dis-equilibrium.
▪ This is an extremely difficult task, since in normally articulated speech there are seldom pauses between the individual words.
▪ You could have driven an articulated lorry up the leg.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Articulated

Articulated \Ar*tic"u*la`ted\, a.

  1. United by, or provided with, articulations; jointed; as, an articulated skeleton.

  2. Produced, as a letter, syllable, or word, by the organs of speech; pronounced.

Articulated

Articulate \Ar*tic"u*late\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Articulated; p. pr. & vb. n. Articulating].

  1. To utter articulate sounds; to utter the elementary sounds of a language; to enunciate; to speak distinctly.

  2. To treat or make terms. [Obs.]
    --Shak.

  3. To join or be connected by articulation.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
articulated

"jointed," 1610s, past participle adjective from articulate (v.). Meaning "made distinct" is from 1855.

Wiktionary
articulated
  1. 1 Constructed with one or more pivoted joints which allow bending of an otherwise rigid structure. 2 Specifically, describes a vehicle with such joints, e.g. an articulated lorry, articulated bus, or certain kinds of streetcars and trains. v

  2. (en-past of: articulate)

WordNet
articulated
  1. adj. consisting of segments held together by joints [syn: articulate] [ant: unarticulated]

  2. pronounced distinctly and clearly; "her words were well articulated"

Wikipedia
Articulated (education)

Articulated is an educational pathway offered by Australian TAFE Institutes that allows a student to study for a higher qualification through a series of steps made of increasing level qualifications.

For example, a student may study, in the same or associated field, along the following path with each step providing direct credit for the next level of qualification.

Usage examples of "articulated".

But, on the other hand, the complete network of signs is linked together and articulated according to patterns proper to meaning.

It then assumed four forms, which, though distinct, were interdependent and articulated upon each other.

It is therefore also through nomination that discourse is articulated upon knowledge.

But though these references may well explain why it was in fact in such and such a determined set of circumstances and in answer to such and such a precise question that these sciences were articulated, nevertheless, their intrinsic possibility, the simple fact that man, whether in isolation or as a group, and for the first time since human beings have existed and have lived together in societies, should have become the object of science - that cannot be considered or treated as a phenomenon of opinion: it is an event in the order of knowledge.

It becomes a defect only if the models have not been precisely ordered and explicitly articulated in relation to one another.

The Culture-bearing stratum, articulated into creators and appreciators, is invisible as such.

Their negative will is diffused throughout all the individuals, whereas the will of Japan is concentrated and articulated into a nation-bearing stratum.

The Gulf War gave us perhaps the first fully articulated example of this new epistemology of the concept.

It is configured ab initio as a dynamic and flexible systemic structure that is articulated horizontally.

This drama will have to be clarified and articulated much further as our study proceeds, but we should insist right from the outset that this is not simply another variant of dialectical Enlightenment.

This central relationship between the form and the content of modern sovereignty is fully articulated in the work of Adam Smith.

The city is thus a constituent power that is formed through plural social conflicts articulated in continuous constitutional processes.

The United States is the peace police, but only in the final instance, when the supranational organizations of peace call for an organizational activity and an articulated complex of juridical and organizational initiatives.

His analysis of imperialism is articulated primarily by challenging the theses of RudolfHilf erding and Karl Kautsky.

When a new social reality is formed, integrating both the development of capital and the proletarianization of the population into a single process, the political form of command must itself be modified and articulated in a manner and on a scale adequate to this process, a global quasistate of the disciplinary regime.