different between colligation vs colligable
colligation
English
Etymology
From Latin colligatio.
Noun
colligation (countable and uncountable, plural colligations)
- A binding together.
- (logic) The formulation of a general hypothesis which seeks to connect two or more facts.
- 2011, Laura J. Snyder, The Philosophical Breakfast Club Broadway Books, page 252 (in a discussion of William Whewell's Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, Founded upon Their History (1840))
- In order to have knowledge of the physical world, we use our ideas and concepts as the "thread" on which we string the facts about the world, the "pearls." We do this by a process Whewell called colligation.
- 2011, Laura J. Snyder, The Philosophical Breakfast Club Broadway Books, page 252 (in a discussion of William Whewell's Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, Founded upon Their History (1840))
- (linguistics) The co-occurrence of syntactic categories, usually within a sentence.
Derived terms
- colligational
Translations
See also
- (logic): intersection
- (linguistics): collocation
colligation From the web:
- what is colligation in linguistics
- what does colligative mean
- what is colligation in linguistics ppt
- what is colligation and collocation
colligable
English
Adjective
colligable (comparative more colligable, superlative most colligable)
- (linguistics) Capable of forming a colligation
colligable From the web:
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