Owen—Interrogative Thought—Means of Its Expression. 357 
D. The Interrogative Judgment— continued. page 
Means of making a conception sufficient. 406 
(a) By one’s own effort. 406 
(b) By the effort of another: 
f Extra-linguistic. 406 
( Linguistic. 406 
The effort of another implies solicitation: 
( Extra-linguistic. 407 
1 Linguistic. 407 
Linguistic solicitation may be 
{ (a) Inferential. 407 
( (b) Explicit .. 408 
( Its control . 408 
{ Is the elected means of making a conception sufficient. 
( Its essential content . 409 
| Is belief in desire that, by linguistic means, another 
make a conception sufficient. 
( Its distinctive . 410 
Is the intercalated element of another's making suffi¬ 
cient by linguistic means. 
Its genera—based upon different kinds of insufficiency 
are: . 410 
( The judgment interrogative as to a term or adjunct. 
( The judgment interrogative as to belief. 
CHAPTER III. 
THE JUDGMENT INTERROGATIVE AS TO A TERM OR 
' ADJUNCT. 
Its Elements. 
The missing element . 414 
The desideratum . 414 
Description of desideratum .. 415 
Assertion of description . 417 
Desire to be told desideratum ... 420 
Assertion of desire . 421 
Precedents for double assertion . 424 
