- Conditions(the statement discusses what conditions would allow x and y to be identical)
- Circumstances or requirements that would need to be present for something to happen or be true.
- Content (in philosophy of language)(what an utterance communicates)
- The meaning or information that a statement carries—what it's actually about.
- Quantification (in logic)(the statement is saying the analysis covers all relevant factors)
- A way of talking about how many things satisfy a condition—like 'all,' 'some,' or 'none.'
- Reflexive(describing how the meaning of an utterance can change based on when and where it's said)
- Something that refers back to or depends on itself or the specific situation it's in, rather than being fixed and universal.
- Utterance-bound(meaning that changes based on who says it, when, and where)
- Tied to or dependent on the specific act of speaking or writing, rather than being independent of it.
- meaning (in philosophy of language)(as used in philosophy of language)
- What a statement is actually conveying or trying to communicate, rather than just the words used.
- proposition(Used in the context of a semantic theory sensitive to differences in subject matter.)
- The content expressed by a sentence, individuated at least in part by the subject matter of the sentence and the contents of its subsentential expressions.
- utterance(Contrast drawn in discussing the referent of demonstrative 'that')
- A concrete event (an utterance-token), as opposed to an abstract utterance-type.