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"Vague" redirects here. For the 2003 Japanese film, see Ambiguous (film).
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Sir John Tenniel's outline of the Caterpillar for Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is noted for its vague focal figure, whose head might be seen as being a human male's face with a pointed nose and pointy button or being the head end of a genuine caterpillar, with the initial two right "genuine" legs visible.[1]
Vagueness is a quality of any idea, thought, proclamation or case whose importance, proposition or understanding can't be completely determined as per a tenet or methodology comprising of a limited number of steps.
The idea of uncertainty is by and large stood out from unclearness. In equivocalness, particular and different understandings are allowed (albeit some may not be instantly obvious), though with data that is dubious, it is hard to structure any understanding at the fancied level of specificity.
Connection may assume a part in determining equivocalness. For instance, the same bit of data may be uncertain in one setting and unambiguous in an alternate.
Substance
1 Linguistic structures
2 Intentional application
2.1 Psychology and administration
3 Music
4 Visual craftsmanship
5 Constructed dialect
6 Computer science
7 Mathematical documentation
7.1 Names of capacities
7.2 Expressions
7.3 Examples of possibly befuddling questionable numerical interpretations
7.4 Notations in quantum optics and quantum mechanics
7.5 Ambiguous terms in physical science and arithmetic
8 Mathematical translation of equivocalness
9 Pedagogic utilization of equivocal interpretations
10 See additionally
11 References
12 External connections
"Vague" redirects here. For the 2003 Japanese film, see Ambiguous (film).
[hide]this article has different issues. If its not too much trouble help enhance it or examine these issues on the discussion page.
This article conceivably holds unique examination. (August 2008)
This article or segment potentially holds at one time unpublished blend of distributed material that passes on plans not attributable to the first sources. (August 2008)
This article needs extra references for confirmation. (Walk 2010)
Sir John Tenniel's outline of the Caterpillar for Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is noted for its vague focal figure, whose head might be seen as being a human male's face with a pointed nose and pointy button or being the head end of a genuine caterpillar, with the initial two right "genuine" legs visible.[1]
Vagueness is a quality of any idea, thought, proclamation or case whose importance, proposition or understanding can't be completely determined as per a tenet or methodology comprising of a limited number of steps.
The idea of uncertainty is by and large stood out from unclearness. In equivocalness, particular and different understandings are allowed (albeit some may not be instantly obvious), though with data that is dubious, it is hard to structure any understanding at the fancied level of specificity.
Connection may assume a part in determining equivocalness. For instance, the same bit of data may be uncertain in one setting and unambiguous in an alternate.
Substance
1 Linguistic structures
2 Intentional application
2.1 Psychology and administration
3 Music
4 Visual craftsmanship
5 Constructed dialect
6 Computer science
7 Mathematical documentation
7.1 Names of capacities
7.2 Expressions
7.3 Examples of possibly befuddling questionable numerical interpretations
7.4 Notations in quantum optics and quantum mechanics
7.5 Ambiguous terms in physical science and arithmetic
8 Mathematical translation of equivocalness
9 Pedagogic utilization of equivocal interpretations
10 See additionally
11 References
12 External connections
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