Whoever coined the term “coined the term”, coined the term “coined the term”
What’s with all the punctuation are you mad at me
Someone in this little thread be like:
My single, “My single is dropping,” is dropping.
Somewhere at Microsoft there is, presumably a Teams Team team.
I think there are like, seven of them and they don’t talk to each other.
New
Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo Buffalo or something
Mushroom mushroom?
Badger, badger, badger, badger.
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.
so, whoever coined the term “coined the term”, coined the term “coined the term”
even bash is more precise than human language
ad username: just -j8? how long does that take?
look at you , Mister Money Bag smh
All of the faith that he had had had had no effect on the outcome of his life.
James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher.
I’m not having that
It’s much more parseable with punctuation:
James, while John had had “had”, had had “had had”. “Had had” had had a better effect on the teacher.
My favorite thing about tautologies is how tautological they are.
Amazing; the features I like the most about the things I like are also what I like about the most about them. Truly, you and I have our similarities in common.
Yoy should come join the tautology club. Just remember these three rules:
- The first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club
- The second rule of tautology club is not the first rule of tautology club
- If this is your first night at tautology club, you haven’t been here before
Will Will Smith smith? Will Smith will smith.
Buffalo buffalo buffalo, etc
…for any natural number of repetitions of “buffalo”, no less.
a good way to teach both a weird case in English and a common algorithm in information science at the same time, if one wanted to do that in a STEAM course
Oh! Is that the new “Science, Technology, Engineering, AI, And Math” Curricula? 🪦
Shakespeare coined it.
This why we need term limits
oh, i miss word avalanches
Wouldn’t the sentence ‘I want to put a hyphen between the words Fish and And and And and Chips in my Fish-and-Chips sign’ have been clearer if quotation marks had been placed before Fish, and between Fish and and, and and and And, and And and and, and and and And, and And and and, and and and Chips, as well as after Chips?
We must go deeper!
Yes.
I’ve read and so many times now it doesn’t look like a word anymore
&
“And, per se, and”
James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher
That’s streets ahead
For the confused:
"Whoever coined the term ‘CTM’, coined the term, ‘CTM’!"(“CTM” being the term, “coined the term”.)
(Please note that “term” is not an accurate word. A potentially better word would be “idiom”. Thank you for reading.)