Glossary:Quantifiers: Difference between revisions

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==References==
==References==
* Gregory, Howard. 2000. Semantics. Language Workbook. London/New York: Rutledge.
* Gregory, Howard. 2000. ''Semantics. Language Workbook.'' London/New York: Rutledge.
* http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/quantifier?q=quantifier
* http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/quantifier?q=quantifier



Revision as of 00:06, 24 June 2016

Back to the Basic Glossary

Pronunciation

BE /ˈkwɒntɪfaɪə/, AE /ˈkwɑntɪˌfaɪər/

Definition

A quantifier is an expression (e.g. all, some) that indicates the scope of a term to which it is attached. It is used to make general statements about whole classes of entities rather than statements which are only true of a particular entity.

There are different types of quantifiers: logical quantifiers (universal quantifier, existential quantifier), restricted quantifiers

Examples

  • Ramon signs every sculpture he makes
  • Several cars crashed.
  • All cities are dirty’ (or for that matter ‘no cities are dirty’) involve quantifiers, whereas ‘London is dirty’ only conveys information about a particular entity.

References

Related Terms

  • Logical quantifiers
  • Universal quantifier
  • Existential quantifier
  • Restricted quntidier
  • Predicate logic (first-order predicate logic)
  • Logical form