Sentence examples for designating the same from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Note that in works such as Buddhaghosa's Visuddhimagga and Vasubandhu's Treasury of Higher Knowledge, manas, vijñāna, and citta are used more or less synonymously as designating the same mental reality (cf. Lamotte 1938, 15).

Willdenow published both A. cuneata and A. crenata, giving them different descriptions but designating the same type specimen for both.

Likewise, the between-gradient variation of markers designating the same compartment are relatively small with coefficients of variation of 29±8.5%, 19.1±5.8%, and 21.8±7.7% for the plastidic, cytosolic, and vacuolar compartment, respectively (all as mean ± SD; Figure S2A).

Each MeSH descriptor is named by a preferred term and may have some entry terms or synonyms, e.g. "myocardial infarction" is the preferred term designating the same MeSH descriptor rather than "myocardial infarct", "infarct, myocardial", etc. which are entry terms, or synonyms.

Designating the same spot and time each day will help your child develop a discipline and stick with it.

Similar(55)

A rigid designator designates the same object in all possible worlds in which that object exists and never designates anything else.

Kripke (1980) famously argues that because a rigid designator designates the same object in all possible worlds, an identity statement in which the identity sign is flanked by two rigid designators must be necessarily true if it is true at all, even if the statement is not a priori.

First, a rigid designator designates the same object in all possible worlds as it is used in the actual world, not as it is used in other possible worlds in which the object gets picked out: for although we identify objects in other worlds by our own names, natives of some of these worlds use other names (Kripke 1980, p. 77).

A two-dimensionalist adds that if both designators rigidly designate the same entity diagonally, then the statement is a priori, as 'Watery stuff = wet, drinkable … stuff' is, or as 'H2O = H2O' is.

Kripke would say that if both designators in an identity statement rigidly designate the same entity, then the statement is necessarily true, as 'Water = H2O' is.

A two-dimensionalist naturally understands this claim as one that concerns horizontal rigidity: for her, if both designators in an identity statement rigidly designate the same entity horizontally, then the statement is necessarily true, as 'Water = H2O' is.

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