0 relating to the way different words or language elements can be combined to make language structures:
syntagmatic analysis
The three processes of mixing are constrained by different structural conditions tied to paradigmatic and syntagmatic relations.
Some syntagmatic patterns are more directly associated with specific concepts than others.
The syntagmatic strand is understood as the causal chain of events, the ongoing, developing 'story' of the soap.
It may be concluded that the syntagmatic context is heavily asymmetrical.
To find how consistently the children responded with paradigmatic and syntagmatic associations, correlations were performed with each age group.
Conventional wisdom has its own syntagmatic norms of expression.
Contexts at both the paradigmatic and the syntagmatic levels are sensitive to the constraints dealing with distinctness or similarity.
Syntagmatic associations form connected language and discourse, such as ' cold ' - ' outside ', ' deep ' - ' hole ', ' apple ' - ' eat ', and tend to give information about the present situation.