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00:18
0
Q: Inspiring from something

ShayanIn my paper, I want to say a sentence like this: Inspiring from human societies, we want to do something. As I searched it seems that "inspiring from" is not correct. What should I use instead of that? Just to clarify, I don't want to use "inspired by", since human societies did not DO anyt...

Their first language prohibits that?
In His music interested me, the music interested "me". The same goes to His music inspired me. The music inspired "me", and thus I'm inspired by his music. There is no need to avoid saying Inspired by an inanimate thing, we do such and such. — Damkerng T. 1 min ago
Anonymous
00:41
@DamkerngT. I suppose it's possible it's L1 interference, though it could also be a simple misunderstanding in English
Ah, I should fix the tense (I was inspired by his music), but I think it's older than 5 minutes now.
Anonymous
Well, I'm inspired by his music is also grammatical, at any rate :-)
Anonymous
Even if it's not the exact sentence you meant to type.
01:13
A very interesting answer, I wonder why nobody else mentioned that possibility:
1
A: "But these are the exceptions rather than the rule" - could we omit the first definite article here?

User1No, dropping the article makes little sense here. And this based on grammar, not on the collocation the exception rather than the rule. And note it is a collocation and not an idiom. The author uses the exceptions because he has a definite subset of mental illnesses in mind. The construction of ...

Anonymous
I've been going through the unanswered questions list (note: attributive plural) looking for answers good enough to upvote. If at least one answer on each question reaches 1 point, then it's removed from the unanswered questions list.
Anonymous
So unfortunately, I've used all my votes and can't downvote the answer you linked ;-)
@snailboat A noble deed!
@snailboat Oh, so you disagree with my secret admirer, User1?
Anonymous
I don't think the article needs to be inserted.
Anonymous
(I don't think it's "dropped" if it's not present―it's not a matter of ellipsis)
01:16
@snailboat I see.. Anyway, the more opinions the better.
Anonymous
Woah. I like some of Tbridges42's answer, but . . .
Anonymous
> But these are the exceptions rather than the rule.
Anonymous
If I pronounce it like that, I sound ridiculous.
Anonymous
I don't see any reason to stress the or than . . . ?
Anonymous
> But these are exceptions rather than the rule.
Anonymous
01:18
This sounds silly, too.
I think I wouldn't stress than, with or without that the.
Anonymous
I don't agree with Nate Eldredge's answer at all . . .
Anonymous
It's an interesting guess, but the association would never have occurred to me.
Anonymous
And I think I'm capable of deciding whether the sounds good or not without reference to that idiom.
Do you think that the sentence means These are the [only] exceptions rather than the rule?
And There are [some] exceptions rather than the rule, just doesn't make sense?
Anonymous
The red line should include the blue line.
Anonymous
Let's try out some subtraction . . .
yeah
Anonymous
I had to put it in parentheses to get it to understand it as a (mathematical) expression. Did I get the syntax right here? books.google.com/ngrams/…
Anonymous
01:23
This would seem to suggest the shows up roughly half the time.
Anonymous
Unfortunately, Google doesn't publicly expose an interface to 6-grams
Anonymous
So I can't put rule at the end of either term
Anonymous
I found 15/24 results in GloWbE with the
Anonymous
The numbers are too small to really go by, unfortunately
Anonymous
01:26
> Many cite the example of a relative of hers and one or two others who succeeded without going to university. However they fail to understand that they are exceptions rather than the rule. For every Alan Sugar who left school at 15, there are thousands, maybe millions more that flounder and fail in ways they wouldn't have had someone sat them in a lecture hall at 18.
Anonymous
> I'm not trying to hammer anything with a screwdriver, I'm just trying to figure out why you think your so-called "edge cases" are exceptions rather than the rule, and how legally enforcing and protecting metadata will miraculously endow today's derivative works with originality worthy of Intellectual Monopoly protection.
Anonymous
There's definitely plenty of usage without the
Anonymous
So the question is, how do the semantics differ, assuming they do? (Back to jimsug's question)
Anonymous
And is the difference relevant to the case in the OP's question?
Anonymous
(Also, why do I sometimes feel like semantics is singular, and other times plural? That seems weird to me.)
Anonymous
01:28
That's all I've got for now. I can't come up with a valid answer to the question off the top of my head because I'm not sure about the question of semantics.
Sorry, I need to be busy elsewhere! Bye, Snails, Dam, Jimsug!
Anonymous
Later, Copper!
They sure imply two different things to me, but I guess the implications I think would be different from what native speakers think.
See you around @CopperKettle!
If they wrote But these are exceptions rather than the rule, I would think that the writer hadn't categorized mental disorders before he wrote that sentence.
But if they wrote But these are the exceptions rather than the rule (which they did), I would think that the writer had already categorized the mental disorders, likely into two groups, in their mind before he wrote that sentence.
It seems like I read the sentence a little differently from CopperKettle.
(I just read his opinion in the question.)
My reading seems to be in line with TRomano's.
Anonymous
I haven't read TRomano's answer yet.
Here, it is not that we are presenting examples from a set, but an acknowledgment of the very existence of the set. Every rule has its exceptions. Like "these are the pros, and those are the cons". — TRomano Jul 25 at 10:39
Catija seemed to read the sentence the same way CopperKettle did, though.
Yes. It's completely fine. In fact... "the exceptions" makes it sound (to me) like "the only exceptions"... which clearly isn't the case. Omitting "the" makes it sound more open, implying that those two are two of many rather than a finite list of only two items. I posted this before I read the deleted answer, so I came to this conclusion independent of it. — Catija Jul 31 at 6:31
Anonymous
01:39
Naively, I would expect "they are the X rather than the Y" implies that the set is divided into X and Y
That would be similar to TRomano's and my reading.
Anonymous
Whereas "they are X rather than the Y" implies that they're examples of X
Anonymous
But when I think about it, I feel like it's likely to be non-exhaustive in either case.
The important thing about this the, imho, is to make the sentence talking about two groups, not two things.
Anonymous
I think in "(the) exception(s) rather than the rule", it's always going to be about groups.
Anonymous
01:43
If you say "He's the exception rather than the rule", you're not necessarily saying he's the only exception.
@snailboat byu has a google books interface
Interesting. This time (He's the exception rather than the rule), I read it that he's the only exception.
Anonymous
@jimsug Yes, are you saying you think it would be useful here?
@snailboat But you can't search both American and British English at the same time. googlebooks.byu.edu/x.asp
I should turn my model further.
01:45
@snailboat It's a bit more flexible, plus I guess you can inspect results more easily.
@jimsug It's very strange that BYU asked me to create an account to it to use Google Books, but when I did that, it told me that I'd already had one. ('Cause I already have one for COCA.)
So, basically, I can't use the BYU interface, because I've used it 15 times already.
Anonymous
Nope, the BYU interface doesn't support 6-grams either, and the results links just jump to Google Books, which is unfortunate . . .
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Just use the login you made for COCA
@snailboat If I do that, when I switch to Google Books, BYU will think I haven't logged in yet!
It's very weird!
Oh, it allows me today, but as an anonymous user, I think.
Anonymous
Yeah, I don't think this phrase carries the meaning of exhaustive listing of exceptions, regardless of whether the is inserted
Anonymous
01:50
I've been looking through results, and I think if the exhaustive listing meaning is taken from the phrase, it's because it makes sense to interpret it that way contextually
nods
Too bad that Cocopop didn't discuss whether it's possible to write the sentence without the the.
Anonymous
My conclusion: the doesn't really matter in terms of meaning
Anonymous
Although I think there must be cases where that isn't true.
Anonymous
In the examples I looked at, it didn't seem to me that it made a difference.
Anonymous
Maybe the exhaustive listing interpretation is available if the is present in the right context, but is never available without the?
Anonymous
02:04
But in most contexts that interpretation isn't selected, so the ends up not affecting the meaning most of the time?
Anonymous
It certainly does affect the sound of the sentence.
Anonymous
Maybe after some more research I could write an answer, but for now I'm still going to hold off.
Anonymous
I tend to write answers too hastily
@snailboat I think that's the case, and it's essentially the same as part of ultrasawblade's answer.
> You do not use an article before plural nouns in English unless you mean a specific set of X or multiple groups of X previously mentioned or observed.
Anonymous
But that's not what I said.
02:09
Probably not exactly the same, but I think the underlying concepts of his and your ideas are the same.
Anonymous
I don't think so . . .
Anonymous
I think that in this case the makes no difference most of the time. (Certainly in all the examples I looked at.)
Anonymous
I think that in the right context, it could make a difference.
He seems to also think so.
Anonymous
02:10
But the sentence you quoted contradicts what I just wrote.
I think that he also thinks so, too.
Hmm...
Anonymous
Well, let me read his whole answer.
Anonymous
Hmm, no, I don't think it's quite the same as what I'm thinking, but it seems like a decent enough answer anyway.
Maybe I expand on his thinking a little too much. :-)
Anonymous
Well, I don't agree with his answer exactly, but . . .
Anonymous
02:13
TRomano's answer is good, although it's posted as a comment so it can't be accepted
Especially the part "previously mentioned or observed", which I think all native speakers know that it's not limited to only that.
@snailboat nods -- I agree with him too.
Anonymous
Well, part of the universe of discourse shared by speaker and listener.
Anonymous
It's funny how different people learn different meanings for acronyms.
Anonymous
Or learn multiple meanings, but favor whichever they've seen more often.
Anonymous
02:22
Like, when I see "Japanese VN", I think "Japanese verbal noun".
Anonymous
But it can also mean "Japanese visual novel"
Visual novel, like graphic novel, or manga?
Oh, it's a type of games!
Anonymous
Yeah! I played one called Steins;Gate [sic]
Oh, on Xbox?
Anonymous
It seems like a really neat medium, but I've had a hard time finding ones that seem like I'd like them.
Anonymous
02:25
No, on my computer. I don't have an Xbox
Ahh
> The game is described by the development team as a "hypothetical science ADV".
^That's another acronym!
Anonymous
The problem is that, if you look at the genre, most of them are adult titles :-(
Anonymous
ADV = アドベンチャー 'adventure'
Anonymous
You might call it an abbreviation rather than an acronym
@snailboat I didn't know about the name of its genre in English, but one of my friends showed them to me once, and he had, like, tons and tons of them!
Anonymous
02:27
@DamkerngT. In Japanese, people say eroge (lit. "erotic game")
A-ha! A portmanteau!
Anonymous
No, it's just a clipping
Oh, I see.
Anonymous
Metrical clipping tends to reduce phrases to 2:2 or 4:4 morae
Anonymous
スノーボード snowboard → スノボー sno-bō
Anonymous
02:29
Here's a single word reduced in this fashion
Anonymous
In some cases, a long final syllable can be shortened, e.g. クソゲーム 'crap game' → クソゲ 'crap ga(me)'
If someone said "snowbo" to me, I would have no idea what it is!
Anonymous
In Japanese, this is a very productive way of clipping words
Anonymous
The speaker has some freedom in choosing which morae to preserve
Anonymous
サムライフラメンコ 'Samurai Flamenco' → サムメンコ 'Samumenco'
02:31
Hehe!
Anonymous
This one's 2:3 instead of 2:2, and it chooses the beginning and end instead of the beginning of each word
Anonymous
These might be called portmanteaux in English but I would avoid that term myself because the process by which they're formed is quite distinct
Anonymous
And because they can be shortenings of single words, not just phrases
Anonymous
So I call them metrical clippings
Anonymous
Most often they fit a 2:2 or 4:4 rhythm
Anonymous
02:33
ファミリーコンピュータ 'Family Computer' → ファミコン 'Famicom'
Anonymous
There's a 2:2 example
Anonymous
I wonder if I can think of dorkier examples :-)
Anonymous
Oh! I can!
Anonymous
Another 2:1 example.
Anonymous
02:35
Remember I told you I got a 3DS? In the game I've been playing,
Anonymous
there was that puzzle with the bar, right? I told you about the three drinks and their colors (green sun)
Anonymous
Did I tell you about the baka joke?
Anonymous
02:36
I examined the bar counter, and the character observed that it was a バーカウンター 'bar counter'
Anonymous
And then the other character abbreviated it to バーカ
Anonymous
And they were like, "Are you saying they put this bar counter here to call us stupid!?"
Anonymous
See, this sort of abbreviation is very productive :-)
Anonymous
I can come up with another dorky example, too.
Anonymous
02:38
There's a cartoon called Yamada-kun to 7-nin no Majo
Anonymous
やまだくんとななにんのまじょ → やまじょ
Anonymous
This one is an actual blend!
Anonymous
The two 2-mora sections overlap.
Anonymous
That's the only example I can think of where they overlap, though.
The last example reminds me of credibility.
Anonymous
02:41
Oh, how so?
Though it's from credible, not credit, though.
Anonymous
Yeah.
Anonymous
There was no it there to begin with.
But somehow the meaning of credibility seems to be used for people or ideas that deserve the credits. :D
Anonymous
Credit and credible derive from two different forms of credere
Anonymous
02:43
Although credit has shifted in meaning
Anonymous
So it no longer means 'trust, belief'
But discredit still doesn't shift, or at least hasn't shifted that much.
Anonymous
"still hasn't shifted [in meaning]"
Thanks!
Anonymous
I'm playing my third visual novel now. That's why I got the 3DS. It seems like such a neat medium! Basically, you get to read a story and hear the voice acting for all of the text while you read. So I think that makes it a really good way to practice connecting the spoken language with the written language!
Anonymous
02:48
So it's a shame so many of the games are of that sort.
Anonymous
Getting an audiobook plus a paper book is also a really good way to practice, but audiobooks aren't popular in Japan, so it's hard to find very many.
Anonymous
I've got Harry Potter in Japanese on paper and in audiobook format! :-)
Anonymous
But to be honest I'm pretty tired of Harry Potter.
Anonymous
I definitely feel like it's helpful if you can find media that let you read along with spoken text.
Hehe! 'Cause lots of ELL questions are about HP? :P
Anonymous
02:51
Haha, no, I just, well,
Anonymous
I never read Harry Potter until book 7 came out.
Anonymous
When I heard the series was done, I bought all seven and read them one after another.
Anonymous
And on the whole, I liked it quite a lot, but not enough to want to re- and re-re-read it.
Anonymous
It's not like my favorite series or anything.
Some novels that I like are a bit goofy. :-)
Anonymous
02:54
Well, I'll read just about anything in the urban fantasy genre except Twilight or Anita Blake past book eight, so I don't have room to criticize :-)
I just bought this on Kindle (Decipher: amazon.com/Decipher-Stel-Pavlou/dp/0312366965), even though I have its paperback version and have finished reading it years ago.
I guess I like it because the hero is a linguist. :P
Anonymous
Oh! Really?
How many novels are like that?! :-)
Hmm... dunno why 'is' sounds good to me up there.
Anonymous
Are
nods -- I think grammatically, it should be are.
Anonymous
02:56
Twenty novels is a lot to read. Twenty novels are like that.
Anonymous
The former is a measure expression.
This pattern can trick me sometimes.
I think it could trick native speakers sometimes, too.
(I think we have a question about "X gallons of water is/are", not sure how to find it.)
Anonymous
Try searching for measure expressions singular agreement?
Anonymous
Ten gallons of water is a lot to drink.
Anonymous
Ten gallons of water walk into a bar. The first one says "Drinks are in me!"
03:00
Found it!
Hmm... sometimes my keyboard just doesn't work!
3
Q: "Five thousand tons of water flow/flows"?

user18982 Every minute, five thousand tons of water flow/flows over a cliff into the river below. Should the verb 'flow' be conjugated in singular or plural in this sentence?

Anonymous
Sorry, my joke didn't really work :-)
Ah, I was busy searching! Sorry!
LOL
Anonymous
Aw, it never got a decent answer.
I know enough to not vote any of them!
I think it won't take really long before my browser crashes again.
Anonymous
The key is that there are two ways of thinking about it:
Anonymous
03:05
1. Is "twenty dollars" referring to an amount of money?
Anonymous
OR
Anonymous
2. Is "twenty dollars" referring to twenty individual dollars?
Anonymous
All twenty dollars are marked with red ink.
Anonymous
Twenty dollars is more than I'm willing to spend.
Anonymous
The same works for other sorts of measure expressions.
Anonymous
03:06
1. Is "twenty miles" referring to a distance?
Anonymous
2. Is "twenty miles" referring to twenty individual miles?
Anonymous
In examples like this, the latter interpretation is pretty rare.
nods -- I think I prefer flows in the question too. But when I think about it more carefully, I think maybe both are possible.
> Every minute, five thousand tons of water flow(s) over a cliff into the river below.
Anonymous
I put a bounty on it.
03:09
Wow... now that's a bounty. I trust you'll actually award it to the person who deserves it.
Actually, now that I think about it... I don't think I've seen him since that question... but maybe I've just been missing the questions.
Anonymous
Well, I'm sure other people can learn from it.
Anonymous
@Catija I pick my bounty amounts sort of at random. It doesn't seem like the amount has a major influence on how many people write answers.
Anonymous
You can get lots of answers with a 50-point bounty, but sometimes a 500-point bounty goes unclaimed.
Huh, interesting. You certainly have the rep to spare, regardless :P
Anonymous
I guess so. Oh, I should offer another 100-point bounty
Anonymous
03:13
I'm not sure on what question . . .
Anonymous
It says "46 Offered bounties for 7,900 reputation", and if I offer a 100-point bounty, I can get it to an even 8,000 :-)
Oh, that's the motivation! :-)
Anonymous
Yeah. Who cares about people getting answers? I just need my numbers to go up. Precious, precious numbers.
I've never offered a bounty. I'm very attached to my rep. I don't have enough to give them away. :p
Anonymous
Wow, this is a funny spam: ell.stackexchange.com/a/63397/230
Anonymous
03:15
Thanks for deleting it :-)
Anonymous
But really? "one direction is life and im a proud directioner."?
@snailboat Honestly, that's better than the equivalent "Jesus Christ" spam that was on M&TV the other day
I think my first bounty was before when I had even 800 rep points.
Anonymous
@Catija Religious spam is weird.
@snailboat It was the first answer I saw today! :-)
Anonymous
03:17
@Catija I don't want my reputation on ELL to end up higher than my reputation on Japanese.SE, because I want Japanese.SE to stay on the top of my accounts list.
@snailboat Yeah. I joked with the Mod on M&TV that we should try to send it to Christianity.SE.
Anonymous
Right now, I'm almost 5000 points ahead on Japanese.SE, so I don't really need to make my ELL reputation any lower, but if I'd never offered any bounties, ELL would be on top!
Anonymous
And we can't have that!
That kind of spam makes people feel weird to flag or vote to delete, perhaps?
@snailboat That makes sense. ELL is my highest right now. I answer most questions here. I think my answers on M&TV get a lot of rep but there are fewer answers.
Anonymous
03:18
@DamkerngT. Does it? I would do both without hesitation.
@snailboat applauds!
@snailboat Oh!
@DamkerngT. Yeah, I have no issue getting it deleted. I fully support anyone's personal choice in that matter but I don't need it rubbed in my face.
Anonymous
There we go.
Anonymous
-700 reputation today! :-)
03:39
I really want to get to 2K on ELU. I'm so tired of not being able to see votes... oh wait... is that 5K? Crud. I'll never get there.
Oh, it's 3K. That's not quite so bad... but still.:(
Anonymous
@Catija I think you can see vote counts at 1k and vote to close or reopen at 3k
Oh, they upped the requirements?
I think I can see the votes, and I have barely more than 1k there.
16
Q: “I’m too tired to drive”: Why does removing 'too' make this sentence ungrammatical?

Maulik VThis is grammatical: I'm too tired to drive. but this isn't: I'm tired to drive. Why? How can removing an adverb make a sentence ungrammatical? In a sentence like “He slowly walked down the street”, you can remove the adverb and still get a grammatical sentence: “He walked down the ...

It still is an interesting question.
03:44
@snailboat I can see votes, I'm talking about being able to see if someone's VTC a question. It's one of my favorite things on ELL and M&TV.
Anonymous
Ohh, see close votes. Yeah.
Anonymous
I deliberately made a push to get to 3k on ELU.
Because "She's very young to be going" has got some results.
Anonymous
It's not so bad. It's easier to get rep on ELU than on ELL.
@DamkerngT. That's because the "too" is implied there, for some reason. Not sure why.
03:46
SWR is abundant over there, I think.
Anonymous
I think it's slightly different from the too version.
@DamkerngT. Yeah, those are great if you can get in early... which I never do.
@Catija Aww
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Well, that too, I guess.
Anonymous
Oh! I answered 7 single word requests.
Anonymous
03:47
I have 60 posts total on ELU.
Good idea, but don't use a colon in the middle of a grammatical unit -- in each case, the bullet points could be completing the sentence started in the opening. Use a colon if you set it up like — ewormuth 2 mins ago
I'm not sure what he's saying... do you think he interrupted himself somehow?
For a non-native speaker, SWR is probably the easiest type of question.
Anonymous
They might have accidentally submitted the comment early by bumping the enter key.
Anonymous
Sometimes I use Japanese input to type things like  . . .  or ― or the like
Anonymous
But SE grabs the enter keypress that I use to confirm my selection in Japanese input and submits the comment early
Anonymous
03:50
Because it's not designed to work with Japanese input
Anonymous
(They disable that bug on a few sites like Japanese.SE, so it always surprises me when I run into it on other sites)
I just don't get what's wrong with using a colon at the beginning of a list. I don't read it as the continuation of a sentence. It's bullet points.
@Catija Me either.
Anonymous
Some people believe that a complete sentence should come before a colon.
Anonymous
Of course, people believe lots of things.
03:52
@snailboat But there is a complete sentence before the colon: "In this book I found a variety of grammatical and textual errors"
Anonymous
Well, including doesn't have a complement:
Anonymous
> *In this book I found a variety of grammatical and textual errors including.
I did continue the sentence, but only to emphasize that the list was not exhaustive.
Anonymous
In a way, the following list is filling in for that complement, so it's fine.
Is there a way I could rephrase the sentence so that this person doesn't find issue with what I think is a stupid "rule"?
Anonymous
03:53
Yes.
Anonymous
> In this book, I found a variety of grammatical and textual errors such as the following:
Anonymous
"such as the following" doesn't have the form of a phrase without a complement
Anonymous
"including ___" does (but that's okay)
Bah, I'm getting grumpy. I'm going to try to sleep. See you around.
I think I would write the OP's sentence like this:
> In this book, I kept finding irregular verb tense problems (especially lie/lay, sit/set and run), lack of subjunctive case (i.e., "He wished he was" instead of the correct form "He wished he were"), and repeated typos (e.g., "were" instead of "where", and vice versa).
Good night!
Anonymous
03:56
I don't think you need to edit, though. Yours is fine.
Anonymous
Rest well, Catija!
nods -- The bullet list would work fine.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. I'm afraid their sentence needs more work than that.
Anonymous
The subjunctive is not a case.
Oh, right. But it's their word.
03:58
It's a mood?
I think, at least in Latin.
Anonymous
@Catija Traditionally it would be called a mood, yes.
I can't tell whether the OP is a native speaker or not.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. It seems unlikely.
I've always thought people who were picky about "was" vs "were" were a bit pedantic.
Anonymous
04:01
Well, the was form has been in competition with the were form for hundreds of years.
nods -- but the errors could be typos or brainos.
Anonymous
There are a few key points:
Anonymous
1. The were form is preferred in formal English.
Anonymous
2. The were form appears especially often in certain collocations: "If I were" is very common.
Anonymous
3. The were form is strictly required in certain fossilized constructions: "Were I to agree with you, . . . " but never "Was I to agree with you, . . . "
Anonymous
04:03
But was is commonly used by educated speakers and has been for hundreds of years
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Could be. But it doesn't read like native English.
Anonymous
> I'm wondering [the best way to punctuate and/or format this sentence]
Anonymous
This would usually have a subordinate interrogative clause as a complement, for example:
Anonymous
> I'm wondering [what the best way is to punctuate and/or format this sentence]
04:06
That's the first thing I noticed.
Anonymous
> italics is not available
Anonymous
This would normally take plural agreement:
Anonymous
> italics are not available
about could work too, I think.
@snailboat Oh, I missed that one.
Anonymous
I'm also curious what they mean by "irregular verb tense problems" . . .
Anonymous
04:08
But some native speakers certainly do write, well, oddly.
The book uses run for ran, perhaps?
Anonymous
So I wouldn't rule it out.
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Yeah, could be. But it's not clear that they know what a tense is.
nods -- That could even favor their nativeness, tough. :D
Anonymous
It's true that most native speakers of English have a shaky grasp of grammatical terminology at best.
Anonymous
04:12
Although the same is certainly true of many learners.
Indeed!
Oh talking about grammar, I ran into an interesting paper yesterday.
It says, a student who uses more articles and prepositions will do better in the university!
But those who use more aux. verbs, pronouns, and conjunctions will do worse.
> Previous studies have found that function word use reflects personality and a variety of social and psychological processes. As noted earlier, function word use has also been associated with cognitive thinking styles and psychological states.
> CDI = 30 + article + preposition - personal pronoun - impersonal pronoun – auxiliary verb – conjunction – adverb – negation.
We live in a time that people do uncommon things with their data!
So it seems like, according to the study, the more propositional the essay is, the better the student will do.
It seems to favor noun piles, and the precise use of verbs and adjectives.
Anonymous
05:26
Be careful not to mix up prepositional with propositional
Anonymous
Luckily Japanese only has postpositions, which are harder to mix up with propositions
nods -- I meant propositional this time.
Judging from the favored style the paper seems to point out, I think most sentences in an education essay written by a promising student would be proposition-like.
Anonymous
Oh. What did you mean by it?
Instead of writing, "We think that this method is good," a promising student may write, assertively, "The AAA-BBB CCC-DDD XXX method mentioned in the previous studies yields a better result."
We think that this method is good uses two pronouns, one aux. verb, one conjunction.
The AAA-BBB CCC-DDD XXX method mentioned in the previous studies yields a better result uses three articles, one preposition, no pronoun, no aux. verb, no conjunction.
^educational
05:43
There's an emerging sociological theory about the condensation of meaning in terms.
Legitimation Code Theory.
@jimsug Interesting!
Essentially, language that encodes more meaning is likely to seem more "smart" than that that doesn't.
Oh! That seems like what the paper suggests.
(I wish it were a .org website. :P)
yes.
Karl Maton doesn't like it being called a linguistic theory, because it's more of a semiotic theory, really.
And only a specific code within it — semantic code — deals with the condensation of meaning in signs.
The mentioning of semiotic reminds me of one of our users.
looking...
1
Q: having a strong desire to do something, as you have not done it for a long time

nimaWhen it comes to expressing the fact that, for instance, you have a very strong desire to do something what would you say? For instance, it's a long you have not reading a book: I crave/ long for reading a book having a yen for Any comment would be greatly appreciated. As a footnote, thank...

> I am an ordinary person who has graduated in civil engineering and is studying semiotics and linguistics.
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