- Married Bachelors are Possible - by Stan Patton
In order to get those words, we have to add a lexicon, and if that lexicon rules-out the conjunction of “married” and “bachelor,” then a married bachelor is lexically impossible (per that lexicon)
- Is there a logic of married bachelors? - Philosophy Stack Exchange
The problem in this case is that "bachelor" remains fixed while "marriage" changes The subject and predicate cannot, in a sense, change "tenses" at the same rate
- why the english words bachelor and married have the sense relationship . . .
why the english words bachelor and married have the sense relationship of bachelor or never married? what is the meaning of sense? how understand it? See a translation
- 20 “Bachelor Means Nothing Without Husband and Father”1 : What . . .
Common collocations like eligible bachelor and confirmed bachelor ought to have some kind of lexical status, even if they cannot be considered compounds (cf ALD 1989: 72; Longman 1987: 63)
- Chapter 5 Lexical Relations - NOTES
Componential analysis involves defining words using binary semantic features, while lexical fields group lexemes into sets based on themes The document provides several examples to illustrate these techniques for analyzing semantic relations between words
- BS 4th Semantics Lecture: Sense Relations Lexical Relations . . . - Studocu
There are several types of lexical relations, such as; homonym, polysemy, synonymy, antonym, hyponymy, and metonymy (Palmer, 1976) Not only can words be treated as “containers” of meaning, or as fulfilling “roles” in events, they can also have “relationships” with each other
- Lexical Relations in the English language | LanGeek
In this lesson you will learn about lexical relations, such as homonyms, hyponyms, and word relationships in context Practice with examples and exercises to improve your understanding
- A POSTERIORI ANALYTICITY AND MARRIED BACHELORS
In our language, many statements are not independent and consist of extralogical synonym-pairs (such as ‘bachelor’ and ‘unmarried man’) Under Carnap’s theory, a different state-description would assign truth to the statements, “John is married,” and “John is a bachelor ”
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