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Universalist vs Universalise - What's the difference?

universalist | universalise |

As a noun universalist

is a follower of universalism.

As a verb universalise is

.

universalist

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Universal in scope.
  • *
  • In this connection, she notes (1984, p. 42) that in Vata (a language of the Kru family, spoken in the Ivory Coast) the normal word-order is [NP I [VP XP? V]], where XP? represents one or more Complements of the head V of VP, and where V is positioned at the right periphery of V-bar. She notes that in Vata, a finite Clause containing an Auxiliary will have the AUX positioned in I between the subject NP and the VP, with the V positioned at the end of the VP, as in [...]
    But if I contains no Auxiliary (i.e. is empty), the Verb of the VP will move from V into I, and hence no longer be positioned at the end of VP, but rather in the characteristic I position between NP and VP: cf.
    [...]
    Here, the movement of the Verb out of VP-final position ([...]) into I produces an obvious change in the linear ordering of constituents, thus lending clear empirical support to the V MOVEMENT analysis. And Koopman goes on to suggest that given that we have clear empirical motivation for positing a rule of V MOVEMENT for languages such as Vata, universalist considerations argue in favor of adopting the V MOVEMENT analysis rather than the AFFIX MOVEMENT analysis for English, in default of any evidence to the contrary.
  • *{{quote-news, year=2007, date=January 19, author=Grace Glueck, title=Art in Review, work=New York Times citation
  • , passage=In tracing the relationships between Western Modernism and the arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas, the curators took a universalist approach.}}

    Antonyms

    * particularist

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A proponent of universalism.
  • universalise

    English

    Verb

    (universalis)
  • Derived terms

    * universalisable ----