prenex
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin praenexus (“bound up in front”), from Latin prae- (“before”) and nexus, past participle of nectō (“to bind”).
Adjective
prenex (not comparable)
- (mathematics, logic) Of a formula, having all of its quantifiers at the beginning.
- 1999, Neil Immerman, Descriptive Complexity, New York: Springer-Verlag, →ISBN, page 12:
- "We say that is universal iff it can be written in prenex form — i.e. with all quantifiers at the beginning — using only universal quantifiers."
Derived terms
Noun
prenex (plural prenexes)
- (mathematics, logic) The initial part of a prenex formula where all of the formula's bound variables are bound by logical quantifiers.[1]
- is the prenex of the formula
References
- John Woldemar Cowan, The Lojban Reference Grammar, §16.2
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