Nothing could be further from the truth : for she was far too much a Wittgensteinian sceptic about the ability of any limited sublanguage or logic to take on the role of the whole language.
12.
Joins are closely related to a closure operation that maps formal languages to antimatroids, where the closure of a language " L " is the intersection of all antimatroids containing " L " as a sublanguage.
13.
In addition, BS12 was ahead of SQL in supporting user-defined functions and procedures, using a computationally complete sublanguage, triggers, and a simple " call " interface for use by application programs, all in its very first release in 1982.
14.
Harris's methodology disclosing the correlation of form with meaning was developed into a system for the computer-aided analysis of natural language by a team led by Naomi Sager at NYU, which has been applied to a number of sublanguage domains, most notably to medical informatics.
15.
"' Oowekyala "', also " Ooweekeeno " and " Wuikyala " in the language itself, is a dialect ( or a sublanguage ) of Canadian province of British Columbia, spoken by the Wuikinuxv, whose government is the Wuikinuxv Nation.
16.
This work progressed over the next four decades ( see references ) into a science of sublanguage analysis ( Kittredge & Lehrberger 1982 ), culminating in a demonstration of the informational structures in texts of a sublanguage of science, that of immunology, ( Harris et al . 1989 ) and a fully articulated theory of linguistic informational content ( Harris 1991 ).
17.
This work progressed over the next four decades ( see references ) into a science of sublanguage analysis ( Kittredge & Lehrberger 1982 ), culminating in a demonstration of the informational structures in texts of a sublanguage of science, that of immunology, ( Harris et al . 1989 ) and a fully articulated theory of linguistic informational content ( Harris 1991 ).
18.
In mathematical terms, " a subset of the sentences of a language forms a sublanguage of that language if it is closed under some operations of the language : e . g ., if when two members of a subset are operated on, as by " and " or " because ", the resultant is also a member of that subset " ( Z . S . Harris " Language and Information ", Columbia U . Press, 1988, p . 34 ).
19.
At the time IBM didn't believe in the potential of Codd's ideas, leaving the implementation to a group of programmers not under Codd's supervision, who violated several fundamentals of Codd's relational model; the result was Structured English QUEry Language or SEQUEL . When IBM released its first relational database product, they wanted to have a commercial-quality sublanguage as well, so it overhauled SEQUEL and renamed the basically new language Structured Query Language ( SQL ) to differentiate it from SEQUEL . The acronym SEQUEL was changed to SQL because " SEQUEL " was a trademark of the UK-based Hawker Siddeley aircraft company.