Similar words: information, misinformation, disinformation, formative, normative, information technology, transformative, affirmative. Meaning: [ɪn'fɔrmətɪv /-'fɔːm-] adj. 1. tending to increase knowledge or dissipate ignorance 2. serving to instruct of enlighten or inform 3. providing or conveying information.
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(151) While foreign decisions do not rank as precedent, Kagan answered that they could be informative in much the same way as one might gain knowledge or insight from reading a law review article.
(152) The informative abstract has a high load of specified information.
(153) News headlines have four basic functions: informative, expressive, aesthetic and vocative.
(154) Along with modern social unceasing informative process, library has become the important place in which people get and exchange knowledge information.
(155) An essential guide for the novice and the seasoned professional, it is also an informative reference for the layperson who is interested in the subject.
(156) Apart from the body of the book are three informative appendices.
(157) The design and application of the smart card system increases the campus informative management level.
(158) Review Guidance information, examination informative, free trial, a huge databank of examination questions.
(159) According to Buhler's classification of the language function, the English translator, translation theorist Newmark has divided texts into three types, namely expressive, informative and vocative.
More similar words: information, misinformation, disinformation, formative, normative, information technology, transformative, affirmative, informal, informant, reaction formation, affirmative action, formation, reformation, malformation, transformation, protestant reformation, inform, informed, format, doormat, reformatory, affirmation, confirmation, inflammation, native, putative, relative, sedative, creative.