junctural

junctural

(ˈdʒʌŋktjərəl)
adj
of or relating to a juncture
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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Of particular note was that the development of new lifestyles in urban areas, the distances between home and workplace, the relative ease with which processed food products are purchased, the influence of the media on diet, and the popularisation of information were con junctural determinants of the supply, consumption and availability of risk foods for CVDs (32).
If joy and loyalty were a junctural link uniting nationally oriented choir activists with the party leadership, then a second element was the cohesion of emotions and ideas that would result from learning to sing and singing in a choir among members of workers' collectives: a "choral collective brings people much closer.
The line ending and the fixed caesura at the sixth syllable act as junctural punctuations, both scanning and managing metrical and syntactic (phrasal) articulations.
In addition, due to their weak junctural boundaries, less parsable affixes are increasingly opaque and may incur being re-analysed as part of the stem (Caballero 2010).
NNA - Caretaker Labor Minister Boutros Harb affirmed on Thursday that Doha accord is nothing more than a junctural agreement signed to rescue Lebanon of the past security and constitutional crisis.
Reece concentrates on junctural metanalysis, the ways in which the beginnings or endings of words are dropped or elided with surrounding words to create a new pronunciation.
162-163, 175) that by deriving all reduplication, even total reduplication, by correspondence, BRCT predicts apparently unattested opacity effects like the following hypothetical examples: /bihan-RED/ [right arrow] biham-biham (overcopying of an internal junctural assimilation) or /tapan-RED-la/ [right arrow] tapal-tapal-la (overcopying of an external junctural assimilation).
It can be concluded that iprus and iptaras are not different, inside the chain, as far as their tense values are concerned, but rather in their junctural features, viz., iptaras marks the end of the chain.
Mostly these were units that made a kind of grammatical and semantic sense together but this could change if there were hesitation markers or other junctural markers that seemed meaningful.
Lambdin, "The Junctural Origin of the West Semitic Definite Article," in Near Eastern Studies in Honor of William Foxwell Albright, ed.