Citazioni |
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We assume that each linguistic form has a constant and definite meaning, different from the meaning of any other linguistic form in the same language. Thus hearing several utterances of some one linguistic form, such as 'I'm hungry', we assume [...] that the situations of the several speakers contain some common features and that the differences between these situations are irrelevant (unsemantic) [...] - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.158
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