👉 Unvacuousness in linguistics refers to a type of sentence that can be interpreted as true or false without any additional information being provided, such as an external factor. This is often seen when sentences are made up entirely of statements without any logical structure or grammatical rules, and the speaker simply repeats them out loud. Unvacuousness has been studied in the field of linguistics by philosophers like Thomas Malthus and philosopher John Locke, who argued that unvacuous sentences can be considered