Associations to the word «Imperative»
Noun
- Spiritual
- Tone
- Inclination
- Risk
- Variable
- Con
- Trans
- Expectancy
- Haste
- Judgment
- Request
- Argument
- Endeavor
- Treat
- Theory
- Rule
- Pie
- Alpha
- Accent
- Ideal
- Ra
- Grammar
- Meaning
- Content
- Intellect
- Preference
- Root
- Genesis
- Speech
- Diagnosis
- Notion
- Instruction
- Behavior
- Justification
- Assignment
- Pearce
- Colin
- Cold
- Occupying
- Progressive
- Narrative
- Concept
- Dialect
- Euro
- Pm
Adjective
- Sequential
- Manifest
- Political
- Potential
- Understanding
- Con
- Saxon
- Educational
- Operational
- Inevitable
- Desirable
- Comparative
- Human
- Possible
- Synthetic
- Hebrew
- Adequate
- Binding
- Reactive
- Equivalent
- Necessary
- Appropriate
- Semantic
- Should
- Analogous
- Linguistic
- Formal
- Identical
- Indefinite
- Lexical
- Informal
- Corresponding
- Harsh
- Prudent
- Constitutional
- Theoretical
- Thorough
Verb
Wiktionary
IMPERATIVE, adjective. Essential
IMPERATIVE, adjective. (grammar) of, or relating to the imperative mood
IMPERATIVE, adjective. (computing theory) Having a semantics that incorporates mutable variables.
IMPERATIVE, adjective. Expressing a command; authoritatively or absolutely directive.
IMPERATIVE, noun. (uncountable) (grammar) The grammatical mood expressing an order (see jussive). In English, the imperative form of a verb is the same as that of the bare infinitive.
IMPERATIVE, noun. (countable) (grammar) A verb in imperative mood.
IMPERATIVE, noun. (countable) An essential action, a must: something which is imperative.
IMPERATIVE LANGUAGE, noun. (computing) Any programming language that consists (mostly) of a series of commands, typically assigning values to objects; a procedural language.
IMPERATIVE MOOD, noun. (grammar) The grammatical mood expressing an order (see jussive).
IMPERATIVE MOODS, noun. Plural of imperative mood
IMPERATIVE PROGRAMMING, noun. (programming) a programming paradigm that describes the computation in statements
Dictionary definition
IMPERATIVE, noun. A mood that expresses an intention to influence the listener's behavior.
IMPERATIVE, noun. Some duty that is essential and urgent.
IMPERATIVE, adjective. Requiring attention or action; "as nuclear weapons proliferate, preventing war becomes imperative"; "requests that grew more and more imperative".
IMPERATIVE, adjective. Relating to verbs in the imperative mood.
Wise words
Words - so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing
in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in
the hands of one who knows how to combine them.