Well actually no, I only got 7/8 and didn’t have the capitalization correct. But I appreciate your support, not only in tone but also in source material
Struggling to see it really making sense as a sentence with more than 5. Reading the example doesn’t really seem like a proper sentence either. Replacing buffalo with the 3 different meanings of the word for the full sentence doesn’t really seem like a sentence. “Bison intimidate intimidate bison” specifically, why is intimidate repeated? Also why the extra “Buffalonian bison” at the start.
Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo or something
Mushroom mushroom?
Badger, badger, badger, badger.
Yes
(For those out of the loop)
Well actually no, I only got 7/8 and didn’t have the capitalization correct. But I appreciate your support, not only in tone but also in source material
Struggling to see it really making sense as a sentence with more than 5. Reading the example doesn’t really seem like a proper sentence either. Replacing buffalo with the 3 different meanings of the word for the full sentence doesn’t really seem like a sentence. “Bison intimidate intimidate bison” specifically, why is intimidate repeated? Also why the extra “Buffalonian bison” at the start.
[(Buffalonian bison) (Buffalonian bison intimidate)] intimidate (Buffalonian bison).
At least this easily makes sense - Buffalonian bison intimidate Buffalonian bison, but that just gives you buffalo repeated 5 times.
Buffalonian buffalo [who] Buffalonian buffalo bully, bully Buffalonian buffalo
for me splitting the groups made the sentence make sense: NJ people NY people bully, bully NY people
You & @basis@sh.itjust.works — thank you, very nice!
Ahh, that makes more sense now.