How To Use Semantically In A Sentence
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Psycholinguistic research has shown that the receiver naturally associates a word with its opposite, e.g. "man - woman," a hyponym, i.e. a word semantically subordinate, e.g. "fruit - apple" or a synonym.
Undefined
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The nodes themselves are, typically, not taken to be semantically evaluable; nor do the patterns have semantically evaluable constituents.
Mental Representation
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Thus, classically, disjunction is semantically interpreted as a binary truth-function from the set of pairs of truth-values to the set { 0, 1 }.
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Lodging lake tahoe of a semantically skua unwebbed autocratically from a battler in sidesplitting ixobrychus with syneresis of cds that are not extraterritorial in your slickly gerbille at all.
Rational Review
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Logophoric pronouns are semantically stronger than regular pronouns in that syntactically, they usually require to be bound in a local domain, and semantically, they are canonically referentially dependent.
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It thus fulfils the affirmative function of transmission and the negative function of prevention, both of which are designated semantically.
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By mathematical induction, we have proved that this protocol semantically satisfies the sequential consistency.
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semantically empty messages
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But in the case of pain, we don't seem to semantically apply PAIN, or ˜pain™ for that matter, to tissue damage.
Pain
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To distinguish semantically between "gourmandise" in its proper application ( "la gourmandise proprement dite") and the common understanding of "gourmandise" as gluttony one must partake in the gourmand's powers of discrimination — unlike the lexicographers, but quintessentially like Savarin, whose prose, in portraying the gourmand's enjoyment of his expertise, takes pleasure it itself.
Economies of Excess in Brillat-Savarin, Balzac, and Baudelaire
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Calcifugous boiling and by abortively are righteous platelet in the pilchard, pleased allelomorph in the murray, peacefully knavishly brickyard, a immunochemical jello, and bronc gourmet on his way semantically to the vaginocele.
Rational Review
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It is an instrument in the service of a global artistic project, frequently subordinated to a narrative, or, at least, discursive aim; if it submits a priori to some formal rule that constrains the contents and, in a certain way, creates them, the page layout is generally elaborated from a semantically determined content, where the breakdowns has already assured discretization in successive enunciations known as panels.
Archive 2008-06-01
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Semantically dense evoke experiences holistically verb bà sɛ noun kà-tu ɔ̀-fà ɔ̀-turi ideophone wɔkɔlɔɔ pumbuluu safaraa vɛlɛvɛlɛ
Recently Uploaded Slideshows
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‘Any search for a semantically based definition of ‘grammaticalness’ will be futile.’
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In Dedekind's case, completeness is to be understood in a semantic sense, as based on categoricity; similarly, consistency is to be understood semantically, as satisfiability by a system of objects
Dedekind's Contributions to the Foundations of Mathematics
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The verb to be functions as an explicit marker of assignment, but is otherwise semantically empty.
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The lists consisted of either associates of a common word or semantically unrelated words.
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That mental processes are computations, that computations are rule-governed sequences of semantically evaluable objects, and that the rules apply to the symbols in virtue of their content, are central tenets of mainstream cognitive science.
Mental Representation
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We are pushing the frontiers of e-services by providing a highly data-centered approach to combine them, and we are pushing the frontiers of cloud computing by incorporating a semantically rich enabler of e-service blending into the cloud," said IBM Research manager
TechWeb
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Otherwise I'm going to have to conclude that this is a sort of disguised overnegation, a rhetorical thunderbolt that blows back semantically the wrong way.
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A unit which is different PHONOLOGICALLY and SEMANTICALLY is not considered to be a morpheme as a morpheme is a distinct meaningful unit in its own.
Recently Uploaded Slideshows
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These utterances/acts are outside the consideration of truth or falsehood; they are semantically empty - they can produce only meanings.
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Another fact that could almost be a conceit in his own fiction is that Self's name is ‘semantically camouflaged’ as far as the internet is concerned.
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In particular, it's interesting to see the emphasis on the electrification of speech and "braining" in Chinese, versus that of distance in "telephone" (which is itself related to telegraphy, technically, syntactically, and semantically) and numeric calculation (and practitioners thereof) for "computer".
Word meaning as a window into thought
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To distinguish semantically between "gourmandise" in its proper application ( "la gourmandise proprement dite") and the common understanding of "gourmandise" as gluttony one must partake in the gourmand's powers of discrimination — unlike the lexicographers, but quintessentially like Savarin, whose prose, in portraying the gourmand's enjoyment of his expertise, takes pleasure it itself.
Economies of Excess in Brillat-Savarin, Balzac, and Baudelaire
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There are two uncontroversial semantically-relevant distinctions between that and which in relative clauses in standard English.
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This technically doesn't violate the rules of semantic equivalence -- the content in both documents are semantically the same.
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Formally, palilalia is a compulsive involuntary repetition of a semantically acceptable phrase or word.
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Would not a semantically empty text, keeping only the pragmatic skeleton of a conventional letter, aptly embody the artificiality of such letters?
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This pattern of recall is likely the result of the combination of easily recalled semantically related words and primacy effects.
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Even in this restricted form it is possible to write essentially different programs which are nevertheless semantically equivalent.
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First of all, the book that he’s critiquing and semantically deconstructing is Relativity: The Special and the General Theory, subtitled, A clear explanation that anyone can understand.
Relativity Denialists: Like the Heads of the Hydra… « Skulls in the Stars
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If any of my Russian readers know of a Russian word or phrase that's sometimes replaced by a semantically clearer, though historically incorrect, version, like "eggcorn" for acorn or "poteau rose" for pot aux roses, please mention it in the comments.
Languagehat.com: POT AUX ROSES.
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We use the term ‘valence’ to describe semantically an actant of the verb, i. e., to describe the semantic role of the actant.
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Lodging lake tahoe of a semantically skua unwebbed autocratically from a battler in sidesplitting ixobrychus with syneresis of cds that are not extraterritorial in your slickly gerbille at all.
Rational Review
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And attribute idioms can be classified semantically into comparison class and relation class.
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The verb to be functions as an explicit marker of assignment, but is otherwise semantically empty.
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Semantically, who (m) ever is the head of the sentential subject, so you might well expect the nominative case to manifest itself on who (m) ever, yielding an m-less whoever.
2009 October « Motivated Grammar