In that the child, upon hearing the doorknob turn ( obtaining ), can almost automatically assume that someone is at the door ( deriving meaning ).
22.
Many challenges in NLP involve : natural language understanding, enabling computers to derive meaning from human or natural language input; and others involve natural language generation.
23.
Understanding that no one or anything possesses anything is a specific condition which occurs when one can derive meaning and see the relationships between more events from different perspectives.
24.
Last, citizenship almost always has had an element of exclusion, in the sense that " citizenship " derives meaning, in part, by excluding non-citizens from basic rights and privileges.
25.
Two others are " social coping ", such as seeking social support from others, and " meaning-focused coping ", in which the person concentrates on deriving meaning from the stressful experience.
26.
The first attestation of Middle English " fens " " defence " dates to the 14th century; the derived meaning " to surround with a fence " dates to c . 1500.
27.
Many of the shapes and forms in his work appear to be organic, flowing and soft . One must pay close attention to the gestures of individuals and animals in his paintings to derive meaning.
28.
What was needed was increased ability to derive meaning from voluminous external data by looking at it from a different perspective ( a new " theoria ", from Greek for " way of seeing " ).
29.
;Derived meaning : Some respond that the room, as Searle describes it, " is " connected to the world : through the Chinese speakers that it is " talking " to and through the programmers who designed the knowledge base in his file cabinet.
30.
Following substantially an account of H . P . Grice, Searle suggests that we are able to derive meaning out of indirect speech acts by means of a cooperative process out of which we are able to derive multiple illocutions; however, the process he proposes does not seem to accurately solve the problem.