scholarly journals INVESTIGATION OF VECTOR AND SCALAR PROPERTIES OF STEEL 45 ON THREE-LINK DEFORMATION TRAJECTORIES.

2021 ◽  
Vol 95 (03) ◽  
pp. 375-379
Author(s):  
Eleonora Gordeeva ◽  
◽  
Leonid Shron ◽  
Vladimir Bogutskiy ◽  
◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 433
Author(s):  
Osamu Sawada

The Japanese minimizers kasukani ‘faintly’ and honokani ‘approx. faintly’ and the English minimizer faintly are similar to typical minimizers, such as the Japanese sukoshi ‘a bit’ and English a bit, in that they semantically represent a low degree. However, their meanings and distribution patterns are not the same. I argue that kasukani, honokani, and faintly are sense-based minimizers in that they not only semantically denote a small degree but also convey that thejudge (typically the speaker) measures degree based on his/her own sense ( the senses of sight, smell, taste, etc.) at the level of conventional implicature (CI) (e.g., Grice 1975; Potts 2005; McCready 2010; Gutzmann 2011). It will be shown that this characteristic restricts sense-based minimizers to occur only in a limited environment. This paper also shows that there are variations among the sense-based minimizers with regard to (i) the kind of sense, (ii) the presence/absence of evaluativity, and (iii) the possibility of a combination with an emotive predicate, and will explain them in the non-at-issue domain. In analyzing the meaning of sense-based minimizers, the relationship between a sense-based minimizer and a predicate of personal taste (e.g., Pearson 2013; Ninan 2014; Kennedy & Willer 2019; Willer & Kennedy 2019) will also be discussed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 1196-1200
Author(s):  
N. S. Mozharovskii ◽  
V. A. Kolodezhnyi ◽  
K. N. Rudakov

Author(s):  
V.V. Garanikov ◽  
◽  
E.O. Kornilev ◽  

Abstract. An experimental study of the vector and scalar properties was carried out when changing the direction of deformation on samples made of 9X2 steel. It is shown that after the exhaustion of a certain interval of the trajectory lengths, scalar and vector properties seem to forget the change in the direction of deformation and correspond to the trajectories without changing the direction.


Author(s):  
Rebekah Baglini ◽  
Christopher Kennedy

This chapter investigates the relationship between adjectives and event structure by looking at properties of deverbal adjectives and deadjectival verbs. Although simple adjectives are not eventive, they nevertheless play an important role in matters of event structure, both in the way that they influence the eventive properties of verbs that they are derivationally related to, and in the way that an understanding of the scalar properties of adjectival meaning informs theorizing about eventive meanings. Although often considered in isolation, we show that adjectival gradability and verbal aspect are intimately related scalar phenomena. The structural properties of an adjectival scale determine the aspectual class of a derived event predicate. Similarly, the aspectual structure of a verb phrase constrains the scale structure of an adjectival participle. Our discussion focuses primarily on degree-based approaches to these phenomena, but we also consider alternative approaches based in a more articulated ontology for states.


1999 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 331-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. V. Garanikov ◽  
V. G. Zubchaninov ◽  
N. L. Okhlopkov

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