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- Veridicality abstract "In linguistics, veridicality is a semantic or grammatical assertion of the truth of an utterance. For example, the statement "Paul saw a snake" asserts the truthfulness of the claim, while "Paul did see a snake" is an even stronger assertion. Negation is veridical, though of opposite polarity, sometimes called antiveridical: "Paul didn't see a snake" asserts that the statement "Paul saw a snake" is false. In English, non-indicative moods are frequently used in a nonveridical sense: "Paul may have seen a snake" and "Paul would have seen a snake" do not assert that Paul actually saw a snake (and the second implies that he did not), though "Paul would indeed have seen a snake" is veridical, and some languages have separate veridical conditional moods for such cases.".
- Veridicality wikiPageID "34057414".
- Veridicality wikiPageRevisionID "558371672".
- Veridicality hasPhotoCollection Veridicality.
- Veridicality subject Category:Grammar.
- Veridicality subject Category:Inference.
- Veridicality subject Category:Truth.
- Veridicality comment "In linguistics, veridicality is a semantic or grammatical assertion of the truth of an utterance. For example, the statement "Paul saw a snake" asserts the truthfulness of the claim, while "Paul did see a snake" is an even stronger assertion. Negation is veridical, though of opposite polarity, sometimes called antiveridical: "Paul didn't see a snake" asserts that the statement "Paul saw a snake" is false.".
- Veridicality label "Veridicality".
- Veridicality sameAs m.0hrb25l.
- Veridicality sameAs Q7921318.
- Veridicality sameAs Q7921318.
- Veridicality wasDerivedFrom Veridicality?oldid=558371672.
- Veridicality isPrimaryTopicOf Veridicality.