It is at least so far from being a good reason for displacing that form from the paradigms of our verbs in a grammar, that indeed no better needs be offered for tenaciously retaining it.
If we take a verb of such constant occurrence as to have, we shall find the paradigms almost identical in Latin and Gothic:-- I have in Latin is habeo, in Gothic haba.
It would be easy enough to place side by side the paradigms of declension and conjugation in Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and the other Aryan dialects, and to mark both their coincidences and their differences.
But rules of declension and conjugation, paradigms of regular and irregular nouns and verbs, observations on syntax, and the like, these are the work of the teachers of languages, and of no one else.
These he consults and subjects to a careful analysis, but he does not encumber his memory with paradigms of nouns and verbs, or with long lists of words which have never been used in any work of literature.
Touch and technology: Two paradigms of patient care.
Just as new trees sprout from the trunk of an old tree, so new paradigms take root within an old one.
The educated faithful of the past probably obtained access to the established values of culture and to the main paradigms of science as these confirmed the doctrine defended by the church.
It applies to many beginnings: of new paradigms in science, of technological directions, of art and literature.
Of these paradigms there are two, named in the modern Iroquois grammars paradigms K and A, from the first or characteristic letter of the first personal pronoun.
With faces pale from alarm, and trembling voices, but perfect accuracy, they answered all the Doctor's searching inquiries after the paradigms of Greek verbs that seemed irregular to the verge of impropriety.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "paradigms" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.