capcap23
Member
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2018
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Turkish
- Home Country
- Turkey
- Current Location
- Turkey
Higher-order vagueness in the usual sense is, on this account, an entirely pragmatic phenomenon, in the sense that it concerns correct assertability and believability. Typical vague concepts have borderline cases: objects of which it is neither correct to assert (believe) nor to deny (disbelieve) the concept. Source
Is the underlined relative clause grammatical? As far as I understand, "objects of which" is in the position of object, same as "the concept", not subject so It doesn't make sense to me.
Is the underlined relative clause grammatical? As far as I understand, "objects of which" is in the position of object, same as "the concept", not subject so It doesn't make sense to me.
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