occurrential

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * Of, pertaining to, or essentiating an occurrence or occurrences; occurrent.
 * 1) * 2015, Jason Smith & Tabea Ihsane, Romance Linguistics 2012: Selected Papers from the 42nd Linguistic Symposium on Romance Languages - Cedar City, John Benjamins Publishing Company, page 269
 * This seems to indicate that there are three groups of nominalizations coming from evaluative adjectives: those belonging to the imprudencia type, having both an occurrential and a non-occurrential reading, those that behave like travesura,
 * 1) * 1966, Madeline Elizabeth Ehrman, The Meanings of the Modals in Present-Day American English, Mouton Publications - The University Press, page 84
 * The occurrential modal may in addition show in optative expressions like [31].
 * 1) * 1975, Leon Zawadowski, Inductive Semantics and Syntax: Foundations of Empirical Linguistics, Mouton Publications - The Michigan University Press, page 153
 * In reality, what is essential for the functioning of language is not just any co-occurrential relation, or any co-occurrence, but only categorial co-occurrential relations.
 * 1) * 1936, Abram Cornelius Benjamin, The Logical Structure of Science, K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Company Limited Publishing - The Michigan University Press, page 160
 * Perhaps one may best express this by saying that concepts refer to occurrential elements of occurrential structure, while propositions refer to occurrential structures of occurrential elements.
 * 1) * 1996, Giovanni Adorni & Michael Zock, Trends in Natural Language Generation - An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Springer Publishing Association, page 250
 * In the first case, we then have to determine if the localization is made by a temporal constant (feature chronological) or another occurrence (feature occurrential).
 * 1) * 1971, Edgar Morin, Rumour in Orléans, Pantheon Books - The Michigan University Press, page 269
 * We are still only at the beginnings of an occurrential sociology. Here I would just like to raise two points which may be of some methodological interest.
 * 1) * 2012, Y. King-Farlow & W.N. Christensen, Faith and the Life of Reason, D. Reidel Publishing Company - Dordrecht - Holland, page 193
 * ...an occurrential hypothesis...
 * 1) * 1997, Toril Swan, Olaf Jansen Westvik, Modality in Germanic Languages: Historical and Comparative Perspectives, Mouton de Gruyter - Berlin • New York, page 216
 * With regard to the relative text-occurrential frequency of subjective nb, Takahashi quotes the two linguistic advisers of Bibliographisches Institut Mannheim in the early eighties.