Lecture 17: Syntax, Part 7, and Semantics, Part 1

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MIT 24.900 Introduction to Linguistics, Spring 2022
Instructor: Prof. Norvin W. Richards

This video concludes the discussion of syntax and begins the examination of semantics.

License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA

Speakers: Prof. Norvin W. Richards
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Maybe there is an easier example of A entails B but not A doesn't entail B, "He has been to Germany" entails "he has been to Europe" while "he has never been to Germany" doesn't entail "he has never been to Europe".

imissalyssa
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a

At 1:02:24 ... Question- What languages *do* have a question response word that means or implies " you have made a false presupposition"?

zzoerowan
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Zen buddhism is from Japan. 無 can be read as mu with means without\does not\does not have. More commonly ない or ありません is said in modern Japanese but I wonder if it would natural to say mu to mean "there is no meaning in what you asking" in archaic Japanese.

David-bwil
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