Other theories exist to discuss non-linguistic meaning ( i . e ., meaning as conveyed by body language, meanings as consequences, etc .)
12.
They did not believe that the social and practical dimensions of linguistic meaning could be captured by any attempts at formalization using the tools of logic.
13.
Not only does the text provide linguistic meaning, but also it informs the musical form itself in a way that is uncharacteristic of traditional text-setting practices.
14.
Bagchi has also been active in the area of cognitive sciences with special interests in the relationships amongst sentence structure, computation, linguistic meaning, and human cognition.
15.
The former is the linguistic meaning of an expression, and the latter is the proposition ( or propositional component ) expressed by an expression in a context.
16.
These problems span the hermeneutical spectrum, from the most basic units of linguistic meaning to such technical intellectual disciplines as temporal ordering to one of basic unity of thought and expression:
17.
These linguistic meanings were choreographically evident in Moses Pendleton's " Passion, " which Momix presented on Thursday night as part of its season, through Jan . 5, at the Joyce Theater.
18.
Accuracy in role taking also implies a preexisting social world of shared linguistic meanings that enable actors to respond to their own on-coming behavior in the same way as the other.
19.
Indeed, F�llesdal and his followers suggest that the noema is a generalized version of Frege s account of linguistic meaning, and in particular of his concept of sense ( " Sinn " ).
20.
He concluded that morphemes cannot be defined as the minimal meaning-bearing units, in part because linguistic meaning is so ill-defined, and in part because there are obvious situations in which smaller units are meaning-bearing.