Courts and scholars are experimenting with artificial intelligence tools to help establish the ordinary meaning of words and phrases in statutes and contracts. A tone of cautious optimism—one ...
Matthew Chivvis writes that the Federal Circuit's decisions provide conflicting guidance on the duty to construe a term when the plain and ordinary meaning is disputed. The lack of a clear rule has ...
As we show in a draft article, corpus linguistic tools have been shown to do what LLM AIs cannot—produce transparent, replicable evidence of how a word or phrase is ordinarily used by the public. More ...
Consider Newsom’s May concurrence in Snell v. United Specialty Insurance, a dispute turning on the meaning of “landscaping” and whether installing an in-ground trampoline falls within it. Newsom ...
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