释义 |
‖ nominatum|nɒmɪˈneɪtəm| [L., neut. of nōminātus, pa. pple. of nōmināre nominate v.] ‘The thing that is named by a sign, word, or linguistic expression’ (Webster, 1961).
1947R. Carnap Meaning & Necessity iii. 96 The customary method of meaning analysis regards an expression as a name for a (concrete or abstract) entity, which we call its nominatum. 1949H. Feigl tr. G. Frege in Feigl & Sellars Readings in Philos. Analysis 89 A proper name (word, sign, sign-compound, expression) expresses its sense, and designates or signifies its nominatum. We let a sign express its sense and designate its nominatum. 1962W. & M. Kneale Devel. of Logic viii. 496 ‘Nominatum’ is too obviously artificial. 1966S. Ceccato in Automatic Transl. of Lang. (NATO Summer School, Venice 1962) 77 However, since thought is always constituted by correlations made up of correlata in a given order, it is clear that the second example requires a repetition of the nominatum of ‘water’ which is not required in the first example. |