tralse
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /tɹɔls/, /tɹɑls/
- Rhymes: -ɔls, -ɑls
Adjective
tralse (not comparable)
- (very rare, nonce word) Both true and false.
- 1991, F.M. Akeroyd, “A practical example of Grue”, in The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, volume 42, number 4:
- In the instance of a scientific model or theory being falsified it is proposed to describe the predicate as tralse, ie true before time t and false thereafter.
- 2013, Micheal D. Winterburn, Secrets of the Paradox: Solving the Liar and other logical problems:
- What we should really experience, then, is a fusion of the two, true and false, which we could more accurately record, and refer to, as tralse. The Liar paradox generates tralse, not true and false (which separately are all our minds are capable of handling), and tralse is a permanent state of the two with no oscillations, no variations.
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