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quantifizierende

Quantifizierende is a term used in linguistics and logic to describe expressions or operators that express quantity or the scope of a predicate. In German-language discussions, it is common to refer to quantifying expressions as quantifizierende Ausdrücke or quantifizierende Elemente. The concept distinguishes items that specify how many entities are involved from other modifiers or predicates.

In formal semantics, quantifiers bind variables in logical forms and determine the quantity over which a statement

In linguistics and related fields, quantifizierende Ausdrücke are examined for their syntactic placement, their semantic contribution,

Examples:

- Alle Hunde bellen. (universal quantification)

- Es gibt mehrere Gründe. (existential with plurality)

- Zwei Personen haben das getan. (numerical quantifier)

The term is embedded within quantification theory and is used to categorize elements that specify quantity

is
made.
Classic
examples
are
universal
quantifiers
(for
all)
and
existential
quantifiers
(there
exists).
In
natural
language,
these
are
realized
by
words
and
phrases
such
as
alle,
jeder,
kein
(universal),
es
gibt,
einige,
mehrere
(existential
or
plurality).
Numerals
like
zwei,
drei
function
as
numerical
quantifiers.
The
study
of
quantifiers
also
addresses
how
their
scope
interacts
with
negation,
modality,
and
other
operators,
which
can
yield
different
readings.
and
their
role
in
discourse.
In
computer
science
and
databases,
quantification
appears
in
constructs
that
resemble
universal
or
existential
intent,
such
as
for
all,
there
exists,
or
equivalent
query
forms.
or
the
scope
of
a
proposition,
rather
than
its
qualitative
properties.