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)

  1. (mathematics, logic) Of a formula, having all of its quantifiers at the beginning.
    • 1999, Immerman, Neil, 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."

Noun

prenex (plural prenexes)

  1. (mathematics, logic) Part at the beginning of a prenex formula where all of the formula's bound variables get bound by logical quantifiers.[1]
    is the prenex of the formula

Derived terms

References

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