المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6142 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
معنى قوله تعالى زين للناس حب الشهوات من النساء
2024-11-24
مسألتان في طلب المغفرة من الله
2024-11-24
من آداب التلاوة
2024-11-24
مواعيد زراعة الفجل
2024-11-24
أقسام الغنيمة
2024-11-24
سبب نزول قوله تعالى قل للذين كفروا ستغلبون وتحشرون الى جهنم
2024-11-24

استيلاء المعتمد على قرطبة
7/11/2022
بهار خيوس Anthemis chia
29-8-2019
أي الحشرات تمتلك أشواك لاسعة؟
2-4-2021
معامل الاختلاف Coefficient of Variation
15-12-2015
Glaisher-Kinkelin Constant
16-2-2020
دفاع الإسلام عن التوحيد ومنازلته الوثنية
8-10-2014

Davidsonian semantics  
  
941   04:07 مساءً   date: 2023-08-04
Author : David Crystal
Book or Source : A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics
Page and Part : 129-4


Read More
Date: 16-2-2022 936
Date: 2023-09-19 694
Date: 2023-03-14 798

Davidsonian semantics

A theory of semantics proposed by the British philosopher Donald Davidson (1917–2003), which argues that a theory of truth for a natural language constitutes a theory of meaning for that language. The meaning of any sentence is derivable from axioms which assign semantic properties to its constituents, and sentence structures are linked by valid inferential relations. The term neo-Davidsonian is used for a particular approach to the analysis of THEMATIC ROLES, in which VERBS are regarded as 1-place PREDICATES of events, and thematic roles are treated as 2-place relations between individuals and events; sometimes called event semantics. In a neo-Davidsonian analysis, a sentence such as John hit Bill on the arm would be assigned a LOGICAL FORM such as ∃(e[hit(e) & agent(e, John) & patient(e, Bill) & location(e, the arm)]), where ∃ is the existential quantifier (‘there exists one or more members in the universe . . .’) and e is a special variable over events. The extent to which sentences can be analyzed in terms of event variables is controversial, especially in VIEW of STATIVE and other types of sentence which do not refer to events.