Ambiguity means: 1. doubtfulness or uncertainty of meaning or intention; to speak with ambiguity; ambiguity of manner
2. unclear, indefinite, or an equivocal word, expression, meaning...etc.
Interrelationships are relationships between two or more things, and the way that they are connected. Ambiguities are things that are vague and uncertain.
The visual system resolves ambiguities by sending the signal to the brain where different types of assumptions will be made. The brain will mostly interpret the signals the same as it has from past experiences.
Ambiguities in speech can be avoided by intonation and word breaks to distinguish one meaning from the other and also by stress to state it as a sentence statement,order,question ,threat or request.
A text with ambiguities is unclear or open to multiple interpretations, causing confusion or uncertainty for the reader. It may contain vague language, conflicting information, or unresolved plot points that leave room for different meanings or conclusions.
No, and any remaining ambiguities about its status ended around the time of reunification in 1990.
price elasticities are always negative hence brings ambiguities in the demand curve
God was created in the image of man by man to satisfy otherwise irreconcilable emotional ambiguities, such as death and the need to survive.
Martha Vicinus has written: 'The ambiguities of self-help' -- subject(s): Authors, English, Biography, English Authors
Ari Z. Posner has written: 'Ambiguities of anger' -- subject(s): English literature, History and criticism
Deconstructionism theory focuses on gaps and ambiguities in a text as it believes that language is inherently ambiguous and unstable. By highlighting these gaps, deconstruction aims to challenge the idea of a fixed, stable meaning in a text, revealing the complexities and contradictions within it. This approach allows for a deeper exploration of the multiple interpretations and layers of meaning that can exist within a text.
Fortune telling is dismissed by the scientific community and skeptics as being based on magical thinking and superstition. A clever interpretation of ambiguities
Edith Kaan has written: 'Processing subject-object ambiguities in Dutch' -- subject(s): Dutch language, Syntax, Topic and comment, Psycholinguistics