rescriptive
Definitions
adj
Pertaining to, or answering the purpose of, a rescript.
Thus the Queen's colleges in Ireland, although so framed in their constitution that it is impossible for either Catholic or Protestant youth to be the subjects of religious tampering, have been deemed worthy of a rescriptive denunciation from the Pope himself; as has also the Society of Freemasons , which boasts an existence long prior to the power which has thus denounced it; whilst the "Index Expurgatorius" of the Vatican has cut off, from the perusal of the faithful, some of the most useful,as well as the most sublime, emanations of human genius.
It has been, indeed, the good fortune of the republic that there has been no very strong man in charge of the destinies of any one o f the families who would claim rescriptive right to the administration.
Pertaining to, or answering the purpose of, a rescript.
I prefer to describe it as rescriptive for it assumes sense-making that allows for multiple interpretations and an infinity of the combinations of interpretive strategies that lead to a multiplicity of interpretations.
The converse is also true: disagreements on goals and means in squares one and three cannot be reduced to evaluative and rescriptive factors, since these depend fundamentally on technical-scientific positions.
Pertaining to, or answering the purpose of, a rescript.
The book is rescriptive, rewriting itself all the time.
Thus, independently of the particular characteristics of the dynamic (or static) rescriptive gauge function, uᵢ, the system re-assumes the harmonic oscillator structure of (qᵢ,pᵢ).
Pertaining to, or answering the purpose of, a rescript.
Besides serving as sites of advice or vehicles of intelligence, early modern letters also function as transactions in an ongoing epistolary conversation, and as prompts to rescriptive action by their readers.