نتایج جستجو برای: kruger strict morphology test

تعداد نتایج: 978925  

2006
Farrah Cherry Fortes-Galvan Rachel E. O. Roxas

Morphological analysis in the current methods, such as finite-state and unification-based, are predominantly effective for handling concatenative morphology (e.g. prefixation and suffixation), although some of these techniques can also handle limited non-concatenative phenomena (e.g. infixation and partial and full-stem reduplication). A constraint-based method to perform morphological analysis...

Journal: :J. Philosophical Logic 2013
Elia Zardini

In his [2011], Lionel Shapiro proposes a very interesting deflationist conception of logical consequence, according to which the logical-consequence predicate applying to sentences serves as a merely expressive device allowing us to talk in a generalising way about typically non-linguistic entailment facts (just as, according to a deflationist conception of truth, the truth predicate applying t...

Journal: :J. Symb. Log. 1946
Ruth C. Barcan

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive o...

2016
Toby Friend

The ubiquitous schema ‘All Fs are Gs’ dominates much philosophical discussion on laws but rarely is it shown how actual laws mentioned and used in science are supposed to fit it. After consideration of a variety of laws, including those obviously conditional and those superficially not conditional (such as equations), I argue that we have good reason to support the traditional interpretation of...

Journal: :Comput. Lang. 2000
Guy Tremblay

What is a non-strict functional language? Is a non-strict language necessarily lazy? What additional expressiveness brings non-strictness, with or without laziness? This paper tries to shed some light on these questions. First, in order to characterize non-strictness, di1erent evaluation strategies are introduced: strict, lazy, and lenient. Then, using program examples, how these evaluation str...

2003
Robert Thornton

1. The Bushbuckridge environment and potentials for conflict The Bushbuckridge area of South Africa, together with the Pilgrim's Rest and Graskop area that adjoins it at the top of the escarpment, is a complex and sensitive environment of human settlement, commercial agriculture and nature reserves. Bushbuckridge town, from which the region is named, is a small trading and administrative centre...

Journal: :Comput. J. 1989
Stuart Wray Jon Fairbairn

Non-strict evaluation improves the expressive power of functional languages at the expense of an apparent loss of eeciency. In this paper we give examples of this expressive power, taking as an example an interactive functional program and describing the programming techniques depending on non-strict evaluation which improved its design. Implementation methods for non-strict languages have deli...

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