Chip: “By ‘named kind,’ I simply mean the words and phrases—the “linguistic concepts,” as Enfield calls them—that comprise the denoting forms of language. They are ‘named’ because they are conventional phrases language and they are ‘kinds’ because they implicate/denote conventionalized categories, shaped by repeated uses of people interacting. Of course, ‘named kind,’ to the extent that you interpret it as a meaningful category, is itself a named kind.”