ロングマン現代英英辞典よりprescriptivepre‧scrip‧tive /prɪˈskrɪptɪv/ adjective1MUSTsaying how something should or must be done, or what should be done
prescriptive teaching methods2SLLstating how a language should be used, rather than describing how it is usedOPP descriptive
prescriptive grammar3 →prescriptive right —prescriptively adverbコーパスの例prescriptive• For while there are detailed teacher's notes provided, the Student's Books themselves are not at all prescriptive.• Proponents of what are inevitably radicalsolutions must be unfashionably prescriptive.• The style and format of teachers' guidesvary from the most detached to the most prescriptive.• For the history of linguisticanalysis in the West is overwhelmingly a prescriptive and overtly a political one.• But comprehensive data collection ran ahead of a capacity for meaningful analysis, and prescriptivecontent was disappointing.• I do not intend to turn this into a prescriptivehandbook.• Social capacities are normative or prescriptive, in that they include responsibilities for whose discharge the actor can be praised or criticized.• Essentially feminism is a perspective rather than a particular set of prescriptivevalues.