Sentence examples for proposition so that from inspiring English sources

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Granted, beacons will link stores and online more closely together, and that will strengthen the store-based retailer's overall proposition, so that gives it an advantage over the online-only retailer.

He said the biggest challenge was implementing the Reserve Forces proposition so that it balanced the needs of reservists with their families and employers.

In general, a divided sense occurs if the modal comes in the midst of a proposition, so that the subject precedes it.

We're also working hard to transform the PC and Microsoft buying experience at retail by improving the articulation and demonstration of the Microsoft innovation and value proposition so that it's clear, simple and straightforward for consumers everywhere.

If you think that a negation of a proposition is a proposition (so that in particular a negation of an atomic proposition is a proposition) then you also believe that a negation (or complement or whatever you want to call it) of a predicate is another predicate.

But for us, as an enterprise development center, we now have a responsibility to bridge these two, to say, "Hey, if we are not getting enough businesses to invest in, we can help them to refine their value proposition so that it becomes more reasonable for you to invest in these people.

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(c) The identity theory rests on the assumption that that-clauses always denote propositions, so that the that-clause in "the fact that snow is white" denotes the proposition that snow is white.

Salmon and Soames also hold that 'believes' expresses a relation between individuals and propositions, so that 'Scott believes that Mark Twain is Samuel Clemens' expresses a proposition to the effect Scott stands in the believes relation to the proposition expressed by 'Mark Twain is Samuel Clemens'.

Lewis (1982) favors the same sort of account, but Lewis applies it only to whether-complements. Karttunen, a proponent of the second option, takes wh-complements to denote sets of true propositions, so that 'what John reads' denotes (Karttunen 1977, 20) "a set which contains, for each thing that John reads, the proposition that he reads it".

Wittgenstein concludes that the independence of elementary propositions must be abandoned and that terms for real numbers must enter into atomic propositions, so that the impossibility of something's having both exactly one and exactly two degrees of brightness emerges as an irreducibly mathematical impossibility.

I obviously agree with that proposition so I regret that Pat has gone.

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