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Literary notes about related (AI summary)

In literature, the word "related" is a versatile term used to indicate both the recounting of events and the linking of ideas, relationships, or characteristics. In historical narratives, it frequently signals the act of recounting events—as when military acts are narrated by ancient historians [1] or detailed by figures like Victor Hugo [2]—while in philosophical or abstract texts, it is employed to denote connections between concepts, as seen in the correlation drawn between individual interests and the will [3]. In grammatical studies, it serves to connect linguistic elements, clarifying the relationship between words such as the interrogative pronoun and its adverbial counterparts [4]. Whether used to trace the lineage of a story or to map out the interrelations among ideas, "related" bridges accounts that span from personal recollections to structured academic analyses.
  1. Note 108 ( return ) [ The first military acts of the reign of Jovian are related by Ammianus, (xxv. 6,) Libanius, (Orat. Parent.
    — from The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon
  2. What were they waiting for? We have related what the Commissary of police was doing for his part in his department.
    — from The History of a Crime by Victor Hugo
  3. For only through these is the object interesting to the individual, i.e. , related to the will.
    — from The World as Will and Idea (Vol. 1 of 3) by Arthur Schopenhauer
  4. The interrogative temporal adverb, related to the interrogative pronoun kiu , is kiam , when, at what time?
    — from A Complete Grammar of Esperanto by Ivy Kellerman Reed

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