presupposition
Presupposition - a court that must be true to allow a sentence to be assigned a logical value. In other words, presupposition is the result of both the sentence and the negation. For example, the sentence "The present king of France is bald," and the sentence "The present king of France is not bald" is: "France has a king now." The most common presuppositions are existential judgments presupposed by sentences containing specific descriptors, ie the names of the "longest river of the world", "Stefan's favorite film". For example, the presupposition of the sentence "Andrzej does not remember the name of the longest river in the world" is: "There is the longest river in the world" or "There is Andrzej." Presuppositions often arise as a result of the use of the so-called. Fictitious phrases such as "know that ...", "enjoy that ...", "worry that ...". For example, the presupposition of "Anna is glad she got a gift" is: "Anna got a gift". In common language, presuppositions are those whose expressions are not fully represented and contain hidden thoughts.