- methodological
- adj.Methodological is used with these nouns: ↑approach, ↑innovation, ↑limitation, ↑rigour, ↑shortcoming, ↑weakness
Collocations dictionary. 2013.
Collocations dictionary. 2013.
Methodological — Meth od*o*log ic*al, a. Of or pertaining to methodology. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
methodological — (adj.) 1828, from METHODOLOGY (Cf. methodology) + ICAL (Cf. ical). Related: Methodologically … Etymology dictionary
methodological — methodology UK US /ˌmeθəˈdɒlədʒi/ noun [C or U] (plural methodologies) ► a system of ways of doing, teaching, or studying something: »The methodology and findings of the research team have been criticized. methodological adjective ► »the… … Financial and business terms
methodological — adjective Of, pertaining to, or using methodology No single study will ever be able to overcome any and all methodological limitations. See Also: methodical, methodic … Wiktionary
methodological — methodology ► NOUN (pl. methodologies) ▪ a system of methods used in a particular field. DERIVATIVES methodological adjective methodologist noun … English terms dictionary
methodological — adjective relating to the methodology of some discipline methodological errors • Pertains to noun: ↑methodology • Derivationally related forms: ↑methodology … Useful english dictionary
Methodological relativism — refers to a practice, by Anthropologists who are concerned with describing actual human behavior, in which the researcher suspends or brackets his or her own cultural biases while attempting to understand beliefs and behaviors in their local… … Wikipedia
Methodological individualism — Part of a series on Libertarianism Austrian School … Wikipedia
Methodological solipsism — In epistemology and the philosophy of mind, methodological solipsism has at least two distinct definitions: Methodological solipsism is the epistemological thesis that the individual self and its states are the sole possible or proper starting… … Wikipedia
methodological pluralism — During the 1970s sociologists were prone to argue that a long standing positivistic hegemony in sociology had crumbled, and that the idea that there was one style of social research (underpinned by a unified philosophy of social science and… … Dictionary of sociology