The theory that existence is not a predicate implies, however, that all existential propositions are synthetic. |
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The epsilon operator is a term-forming operator which replaces quantifiers in ordinary predicate logic. |
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A basic predicate of jury service is the juror's ability to render a fair and impartial verdict. |
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In Russian, this sentence is impersonal, without a subject or a predicate, and only Russian case endings indicate the relations between words. |
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In the first, called intrinsic reflexivization, a predicate is marked as a reflexive predicate in the lexicon. |
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It does not contain a semantic predicate, either, because the anaphor is not an argument of the verb. |
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People have mental representations similar to sentences in predicate logic. |
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This work stems from work that Frege did with predicate logic and mathematics. |
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After all, what is so sacrosanct about first-order predicate logic in its standard form? |
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Starting with the technical side, we have seen that the adoption of predicate logic as the basis of reasoning can lead to logical atomism. |
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In the case of morphological marking, a verbal affix is attached to the predicate or predicate complex. |
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The absolute necessity of the judgment is only a conditioned necessity of the thing, or of the predicate in the judgment. |
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The third example shows how the semantic information transmitted in a case grammar can be represented as a predicate. |
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The categories may be interpreted as ten different ways in which a predicate may be related to its subject. |
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In my respectful view, the evidentiary predicate required to sustain the order that the applicants stand trial was present. |
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It can't be used on a non-verbal predicate, but that's not a perfect argument. |
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One of the problems with artificial intelligence was that it relied on what is known as predicate logic, which is very intolerant of imprecision. |
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The use of the indefinite article with predicate nouns is to some extent an idiosyncratic feature of English. |
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The make believe world of predicate logic was a mere conservative extension of finitism. |
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Lojban, a major constructed language based on predicate logic, had its origin in the project Loglan by James Cooke Brown. |
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The copula, is, serves to link the subject and predicate either as a form of classification or identification. |
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Oddest of all, the fronted element is sometimes inserted between subject and predicate. |
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Both Kant and Russell for example are interested in the logical issue of whether existence is a predicate. |
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In stating that the entity possesses the attribute, we use a predicate with a single argument. |
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It's true that many modern philosophies predicate humanness on the ability to reason. |
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In this way, Bradley had a significant, if indirect, impact on predicate calculus. |
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In the classical predicate calculus only conjunction, negation and the universal quantifier are needed. |
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This language, the language of the predicate calculus, is what Russell called the perfect language. |
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Unlike redundancy theories, however, the prosentential theory does not take the truth predicate to be always eliminable without loss. |
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A predicate is exclusively disjunctive if and only it is equivalent to a disjunction of disjoint predicates. |
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In his attempt to explicate the determinate-determinable relation, he uses the notion of predicate entailment. |
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Aristotle construed the deductive stage of scientific inquiry as the interposition of middle terms between the subject and predicate terms of the statement to be proved. |
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Similarly, one can prove the consistency of predicate logic, by specializing to interpretations where the universe of discourse has a single element. |
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Apparent examples of wh-movement are pseudoclefts in which the initial wh-phrase is a predicate and the following material is a headless relative clause in subject position. |
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This later legislative judgment that the offence did not provide a predicate for a finding of dangerousness did not affect the constitutionality of the original sentence. |
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What you are saying is that, strictly speaking, a proof is valid if it is written out in predicate calculus and has the right structure according to the rules of logic. |
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Every simple proposition contains two terms, predicate and subject. |
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The other students, English majors all, seemed terrified by the prospect of a semester of moods and modals, subordinate clauses and predicate adjectives. |
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Some religious traditions indeed predicate apocalyptic hope on a lifetime of self-abnegation and the renunciation of all individual markers of significance and distinction. |
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It is true that first-order predicate logic is so constructed as to admit no such distinction, but that does not mean that there is no such distinction tout court. |
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First, the Committee has laid no predicate for the argument that information is currently shared in impermissible ways. |
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The subject agreement morpheme is a compulsory link between the subject noun phrase and the predicate. |
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The whole mapping yields the assignment of a predicate or a relation to the target. |
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However, the middle term can be either the subject or the predicate of each premise where it appears. |
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These axiom schemata are also used in the predicate calculus, but additional logical axioms are needed to include a quantifier in the calculus. |
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The subject and predicate of a proposition are, after Aristotle, together called its terms or extremes. |
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For example, in many languages qualificative adjectives, which show agreement, are not modified when used as predicate. |
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There is no consensus, however, as to which part should be eliminated from the predicate calculus. |
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Grammatically, the first four types tend to be nouns and usually function as subjects, predicate nominatives, and appositives. |
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It is often said that in order to solve the sorites paradox, some parts of classical predicate logic must be given up. |
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First, it may be used as a propositional attitude predicate of the truth claim type, and mean something similar to realize or understand. |
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A predicate that can only take a single argument is called intransitive, while a predicate that can take two arguments is called transitive. |
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The predicate can be an intransitive verb, a transitive verb followed by a direct object, a linking verb followed by a predicate nominative, etc. |
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Chinese differs from English in distinguishing between names of things, which can stand as predicate nominatives, and names of characteristics. |
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The word there in such sentences has sometimes been analyzed as an adverb, or as a dummy predicate, rather than as a pronoun. |
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In copular sentences, the nominative is used for both subject and predicate. |
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The principal use of a copula is to link the subject of a clause to the predicate. |
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A copular verb is often considered to be part of the predicate, the remainder being called a predicative expression. |
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For example, in the Irish language, is, the present tense of the copula, may be omitted when the predicate is a noun. |
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The words da and desu are used to predicate sentences, while na and de are particles used within sentences to modify or connect. |
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However, da always functions as a predicate, so it cannot be combined with a stative verb, because sentences need only one predicate. |
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The most common, cu, is used to separate any noun phrases before the predicate from the predicate, and is always optional. |
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Cleft sentences are copula constructions in which the focused element serves as the predicate of the sentence. |
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The letter S is the subject of the conclusion, P is the predicate of the conclusion, and M is the middle term. |
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In English text, a predicate can be in the form of a simple verb, a phrasal verb or a verbal collocation. |
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The predicate is the kernel of the narrative predication, which is an endocentric construction. |
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To the extent that predicate position is an indication of adjectivity, however, soon represents no radical departure from the norm. |
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The basic function of the copula in Japanese is to predicate, adnominalize or adverbialize nouns. |
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In predicate logic, an atomic formula consists of a predicate together with its arguments, its arguments being terms. |
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In general, the expression in focus is a predicate, which applies to something which is defined by the cofocus. |
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In narratives, discontinuative predicate focus is used when there is a topic shift, or when two referents are contrasted. |
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My dear Angelina completed the predicate for me with a voluminous appendix, annotated through the agency of her incessive and florid vocabulary. |
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In a declarative sentence in English, if the subject does not occur before the predicate, the sentence could well be misunderstood. |
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The substantive verb is used when the predicate is an adjective, adverb, or prepositional phrase. |
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Most conceptualists go even further and also claim that one has to grasp the being in order to identify or refer to a subject or a predicate of the sentence. |
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Fuzzy logic is derived from fuzzy set theory dealing with reasoning that is approximate rather than precisely deduced from classical predicate logic. |
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These mathematical techniques are typically based on discrete mathematics such as predicate logic, set theory, relations, functions, and graph theory. |
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In the instance of a scientific model or theory being falsified it is proposed to describe the predicate as tralse, ie true before time t and false thereafter. |
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In these views deduction is of central concern not only in predicate logic, but in set theory too, understood from an infinitistic ideal perspective. |
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That is, the syntactic functions that they fulfill are those of the arguments of the main clause predicate, particularly those of subject, object and predicative expression. |
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Many jurisdictions adopt a list of specific predicate crimes for money laundering prosecutions, while others criminalize the proceeds of any serious crimes. |
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A verb phrase headed by a finite verb may also be called a predicate. |
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From the point of view of predicates, each of the main verbs constitutes the core of a predicate, and the auxiliary verbs contribute functional meaning to these predicates. |
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Given that Malagasy has wh-in-situ questions, the pseudocleft analysis is simply an extension of this strategy, in which the wh-phrase is in-situ as a predicate. |
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The extent of action of the verb may be expressed by a substantive of the same meaning as the verb, accompanied by an oblique adjectival predicate. |
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Traditional theories of sentence structure divide the simple sentence into a subject and a predicate, whereby the object is taken to be part of the predicate. |
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There is not an equivalent to the English predicate adjective. |
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