relevance conditional

English

Examples

If you want to, we could go to a movie
  The ability to go to a movie does not depend on "wanting", but the truth of the underlined clause is relevant to the main clause

Examples

If you were wondering, I have your new schedule.
  "Having your new schedule" does not depend on whether "you were wondering", but the truth of the underlined clause is relevant to the main clause

Noun

relevance conditional (plural relevance conditionals)Category:English lemmas#RELEVANCECONDITIONALCategory:English nouns#RELEVANCECONDITIONALCategory:English countable nouns#RELEVANCECONDITIONALCategory:English multiword terms#RELEVANCECONDITIONALCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#RELEVANCECONDITIONALCategory:Pages with entries#RELEVANCE%20CONDITIONALCategory:Pages with 1 entry#RELEVANCE%20CONDITIONAL

  1. (logicCategory:en:Logic#RELEVANCECONDITIONAL, grammarCategory:en:Grammar#RELEVANCECONDITIONAL) A subordinate clause, usually introduced by if, that asserts the relevance of the clause to the main clause of the sentence, but not that it entails the main clause; a construction involving such a clause.
    • 2001, Renaat Declerck, Susan Reed, Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis, page 425:
      To be more precise, the speaker of a relevance conditional assumes a mutual understanding on the parts of the speaker and the addressee[s] that the actualization of P is a sufficient condition for the relevance of the Q-utterance.
      Category:English terms with quotations#RELEVANCECONDITIONAL
    • 2013, Tatjana Scheffler, Two-dimensional Semantics: Clausal Adjuncts and Complements, Walter de Gruyter, page 124:
      For example, relevance conditionals are constructions in conditional shape that do not seem to express a clear conditional meaning at first glance. This has led semanticists to introduce analyses of relevance conditionals that capture many of their properties but are very specific to this construction.
      Category:English terms with quotations#RELEVANCECONDITIONAL
    • 2016, Stephen Finlay, Confusion of Tongues: A Theory of Normative Language, Oxford University Press, page 71:
      A known grammatical marker of relevance conditionals is their resistance to linking their antecedent and consequent clauses with 'then': consider the mild oddity of 'If you want biscuits then there are some on the table.' [] This peculiarity of relevance conditionals is straightforwardly explained by the ellipsis theory, according to which the consequent clause doesn't in general express a real (logical) consequent; 'There are some biscuits on the table' is just asserted as true.
      Category:English terms with quotations#RELEVANCECONDITIONAL

Translations

See also

Further reading

Category:English countable nouns Category:English lemmas Category:English multiword terms Category:English nouns Category:English terms with quotations Category:Entries with translation boxes Category:Pages with 1 entry Category:Pages with entries Category:Terms with Polish translations Category:en:Grammar Category:en:Logic