Speakpigeon wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2019 8:55 am
Logik wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2019 2:07 am
HexHammer wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2019 1:41 am
Most who ask "what is X" need to know what it is before they will ask "what does X do?"
I have a trivial way to test your claim...
HexHammer wrote: ↑Wed Apr 10, 2019 1:41 am
science, psychology, general news
Please can you tell us what "science", "psychology" and "news" ARE without telling us what they DO? e.g don't use any verbs to describe them.
???
Where's the problem exactly?
Science n.
1.a. The observation, identification, description, experimental investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena: new advances in science and technology.
See?
That's all essentially irrelevant to the issue, of course, but you've yet again proved you're abysmally ignorant.
You're also a triple idiot since you can't even think of checking a dictionary whether your question won't reflex badly on your mental abilities.
EB
As an ersatz grammarian, I would like to resolve the apparent contradiction of verbs and nouns.
As is commonly known, a verb describes action or existence, e.g. the verb, “to speak” or the verb,
“to be”; a noun references people, locations or things.
“Observation” is a noun derived from the verb, “to observe”. When a noun is derived from a verb, it is called a gerund. So, in the case of “observation”, the noun names a thing; the thing is an action. A gerund is a special instance of the classification that consists of nouns; a gerund cannot exist without a verb upon which it can depend.
BTW, both “is” and “are” are present tense forms of the intransitive verb, “to be”.
There are two conclusions to be drawn from the foregoing. First, if a post describing what science is uses the phrase, “science is”, it is not a sentence that does not include a verb, and, therefore, is one that supports Logik’s implication that there is no one who can best his challenge. Second, Logik’s argument, though grammatically correct for the most part, does not rely on grammar.