Posted on 05/01/2022 10:21:48 AM PDT by SamAdams76
How many monkeys do you need for this?
I think that’s actually two sentences.
It depends upon the punctuation.
I also took typing class in probably 1976 or ‘77. I do not, however, recall a noticeable imbalance of female vs male students. And our teacher was Mr. Fred Rodgers.
Ours were non-electric typewriters of various vintage. My parents had reason to do a lot of typing, so we were privileged to have an electric at home. That electric still had manual carriage return, though.
“almost an infinite amount of sentences that have not yet been created.”
Frivolous use of conjunctions allow a clause to be added to any ‘sentence’ thus “almost” is limiting as there are infinite possibilities.
BTW, your ‘sentence’ is hard to read even on a big screen
But you were all special types, each and every one of you
Two years of typing class it and was the most useful class I had in that high school - which was otherwise like the school in "Welcome Back Kotter"
That’s the way.
The English language??
Why just the English language?
Any language with an alphabet has that same feature. And even Chinese.
What about the Russian language?
It’s two sentences. The second sentence is a run-on sentence. Back in high school, we would get penalized for that.
26 letters, but at least 2 to 3 times the number of pronunciations.
There was probably a more subtle way to get out of paying for dinner...
Well...even just doing 26^26 is 6.1561195802071573107966742884002e+36, which doesn’t include words with more than one instance of the same letter, or sentences that are more than 26 letters.
So yeah, there’s probably simple sentences that have never been uttered.
The language may have just 26 letters, but we have way more phonemes. Having one letter for each phoneme could result in having as many as (or more than) 32 letters, such as in Russian Cyrillic.
Using “th” for two different phonemes is very confusing. Not to mention silent letters.
Anyone with just a few brain cells was already aware of your premise.
What is your point, exactly? I have to believe that your intent is more than simply saying that the English language has infinite possibilities.
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