putative
/ˈpjuːtətɪv/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈpjuːtətɪv/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈpyü-tə-tiv/ (ame, mw)
putative — 形容詞
- putativepositive
- more putativecomparative
- most putativesuperlative
1. used for describing a person or thing that people believe or claim to be a certa
假定
被認為是但未經證實的
used for describing a person or thing that people believe or claim to be a certain type, although the truth has not been proved.
The putative heir to the throne appeared at the ceremony alongside the king.
那位假定繼承人與國王一同出席了典禮。
attributive only: always placed before the noun it modifies
Élise introduced her putative cousin at the family dinner, though nobody had met him before.
Élise 在家庭聚餐中介紹了她那位假定表親,但之前沒人見過他。
The painting's putative date of origin was the late 17th century, but experts disagreed.
這幅畫的假定創作年份是 17 世紀晚期,但專家們看法不一。
Police arrested the putative leader of the smuggling ring after a year-long sting operation.
警方在歷經一年的臥底行動後,逮捕了那個走私集團的假定首腦。
Jabari's putative reason for leaving was a better offer, but his colleagues had their doubts.
Jabari 離開的假定理由是有更好的工作機會,但同事們都心存懷疑。
- supposed
more common and neutral; works in both formal and informal contexts, while putative is strictly formal
- alleged
carries stronger overtones of accusation; common in legal and crime reporting, whereas putative is broader
- presumed
implies a reasonable basis for belief, not just rumour; weaker than proven but stronger than putative in evidentiary weight
- reputed
based on general public opinion or reputation; sometimes carries a positive connotation that putative lacks
文法句型
putative + noun
用法筆記
Attributive only — putative must come directly before the noun it describes and cannot follow a linking verb (e.g., ✗ 'The reason was putative'). It belongs to formal registers such as legal, academic, and journalistic writing; avoid in everyday conversation.