Difference between revisions of "Complementarity"
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Volker gast (talk | contribs) (Created page with 'In its broadest sense, '''complementarity''' is a relationship between two sets (or categories, classes) that do not overlap, i.e. they have no element in common. In...') |
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* In lexical semantics, complementarity is a [[sense relation]] that holds between predicates whose denotations do not overlap, i.e. there is no object to which both predicates can apply. | * In lexical semantics, complementarity is a [[sense relation]] that holds between predicates whose denotations do not overlap, i.e. there is no object to which both predicates can apply. | ||
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[[Category:Semantics]] | [[Category:Semantics]] |
Latest revision as of 18:55, 22 June 2014
In its broadest sense, complementarity is a relationship between two sets (or categories, classes) that do not overlap, i.e. they have no element in common. In linguistics, it is used with a variety of more specific meanings:
- Two linguistic elements are said to be in complementary distribution if they cannot occur in the same type of context.
- In lexical semantics, complementarity is a sense relation that holds between predicates whose denotations do not overlap, i.e. there is no object to which both predicates can apply.
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