Sentence examples for relation in a language from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Indeed, this particular instance of Rautenberg's observation is already well known in the literature on Tonk, recalled in §3 below: any consequence relation in a language including a binary connective which satisfies, relative to that consequence relation, both an ∨-Introduction condition and also an ∧-Elimination condition will be one of these trivial consequence relations.

The present data give a clear neurophysiological indication of discrimination between correct and incorrect grammatical sentences, and thereby provide evidence of learning of the non-adjacent dependency relation in a language unknown to the infants prior to the experiment.

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Brown and Lenneberg (1954) investigated this question by looking at the relation of color terminology in a language and the classificatory abilities of the speakers of that language.

While mourning, for Kristeva as for Freud, enables a subject to, gradually and painfully, let go of loss by establishing a relation in language to it, melancholia is a practice which enables the subject to hold onto lost objects, most especially the mother or, better, the dead (or repressed) mother.

Geach's main contention is that any expression for an absolute equivalence relation in any possible language will have the null class as its extension, and so there can be no expression for classical identity in any possible language.

Various publications investigate the preferential and rational consequence relations in a first-order language (e.g., Lehmann and Magidor (1990), Delgrande (1998), Friedman et al. (2000)).

When you become a writer, you don't do so in abstract, but in relation to a certain language.

Background: The determination of risk factors and their temporal relations in natural language patient records is a complex task which has been addressed in the i2b2/UTHealth 2014 shared task.

The analytic/synthetic distinction and the observational/theoretical distinction were tied together by the verifiability criterion of meaningfulness, according to which, in relation to a given language, L, a sentence S is meaningful if and only if it is either analytic-in-L or synthetic-in-L as an observation sentence or a sentence whose truth follows from a finite set of observation sentences.

Grounding the semantics in a level of counterfactual reasoning is shown to play an important role in constraining the set of allowable event descriptions instantiating reports expressed by any of the relations in the language.

Thus, the nodes in each child's network were the words known by that child, and the links between nodes reflected the semantic relations in the language generally and were not specific to the individual child's learning environment.

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