Definition of Entailments. Meaning of Entailments. Synonyms of Entailments

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Entailments. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Entailments and, of course, Entailments synonyms and on the right images related to the word Entailments.

Definition of Entailments

Entailment
Entailment En*tail"ment, n. 1. The act of entailing or of giving, as an estate, and directing the mode of descent. 2. The condition of being entailed. 3. A thing entailed. Brutality as an hereditary entailment becomes an ever weakening force. --R. L. Dugdale.

Meaning of Entailments from wikipedia

- Linguistic entailments are entailments which arise in natural language. If a sentence A entails a sentence B, sentence A cannot be true without B being...
- Logical consequence (also entailment) is a fundamental concept in logic which describes the relationship between statements that hold true when one statement...
- Strawson downward entailingness based on the concept of Strawson entailment, where entailments can be checked while ignoring presupposition failures. The reasoning...
- Look up entail or entailment in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Entail may refer to: Fee tail, a term of art in common law describing a limited form...
- Idempotency of entailment is a property of logical systems that states that one may derive the same consequences from many instances of a hypothesis as...
- Strawson entailment is a variant of the concept of entailment which is insensitive to presupposition failures. Formally, a sentence P Strawson-entails a sentence...
- "CV" (PDF). entailments.net. Retrieved 17 February 2017. "Beall, J. C." worldcat.org. Retrieved 11 December 2016. https://entailments.net/cv/jcb-cv...
- Entail Act (with its variations) is a stock short title used in the United Kingdom for legislation relating to entails. The Entail (Scotland) Act 1914...
- for this group to buy noble titles or orders of chivalry and establish entailments that allowed them to keep large properties without the need to divide...
- these conditions was said to be "entailed" or "held in-tail", with the restrictions themselves known as entailments. The breaking of a fee tail was simplified...