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Presupposed

Presupposed is an adjective describing something assumed to be true or existing before a statement or action. In everyday use, it often refers to background assumptions that underlie an utterance rather than the claim that is directly asserted.

In linguistics, presupposition refers to background information that a sentence takes for granted. Various constructions trigger

Presupposed content is not the same as the sentence’s asserted content; it is a background condition that

Applications of the concept span linguistics, philosophy of language, and natural language processing. Understanding presupposition helps

presuppositions:
definite
noun
phrases
(The
author
of
the
book),
factive
verbs
(know,
realize),
change-of-state
verbs
(stop,
finish),
and
certain
adverbs
or
particles
(again,
even).
For
example,
"John
stopped
smoking"
presupposes
that
John
used
to
smoke;
"The
king
of
France
is
bald"
presupposes
that
there
exists
a
king
of
France.
Presuppositions
commonly
project
through
negation
and
questions,
meaning
they
tend
to
remain
part
of
the
discourse
even
when
the
sentence
is
negated
or
posed
as
a
question.
must
be
compatible
with
the
utterance
and
can
be
true
or
false
independently
of
the
main
clause.
Different
theories
in
semantics
and
pragmatics
address
how
presuppositions
are
triggered,
how
robust
they
are
across
contexts,
and
how
they
interact
with
falsity
and
uncertainty.
explain
how
speakers
convey
implicit
information,
how
listeners
interpret
statements
within
discourse,
and
how
computational
systems
recognize
and
manage
background
assumptions
in
meaning
and
dialogue.
See
also
presupposition,
presuppose,
and
related
topics
in
semantics
and
pragmatics.