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  2. Colorless green ideas sleep furiously - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorless_green_ideas...

    One of the first writers to have attempted to provide the sentence meaning through context is Chinese linguist Yuen Ren Chao (1997). [9] Chao's poem, entitled Making Sense Out of Nonsense: The Story of My Friend Whose "Colorless Green Ideas Sleep Furiously" (after Noam Chomsky) was published in 1971. This poem attempts to explain what ...

  3. Comparative illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_illusion

    In linguistics, a comparative illusion (CI) or Escher sentence [a] is a comparative sentence which initially seems to be acceptable but upon closer reflection has no well-formed, sensical meaning. The typical example sentence used to typify this phenomenon is More people have been to Russia than I have .

  4. List of paradoxes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_paradoxes

    Shows that a sentence can be paradoxical even if it is not self-referring and does not use demonstratives or indexicals. Yablo's paradox: An ordered infinite sequence of sentences, each of which says that all following sentences are false. While constructed to avoid self-reference, there is no consensus whether it relies on self-reference or not.

  5. 50 Times People Dropped Sentences That Probably Only They ...

    www.aol.com/79-hilariously-bizarre-brand...

    It has been estimated that the vocabulary of the English language consists of roughly 1 million words (although some linguists take that number with a grain of salt and say they wouldn't be ...

  6. 20 Things Millennials Did On The Internet That Would Make No ...

    www.aol.com/20-things-millennials-did-internet...

    For many preteen and teen girls ― myself included ― zines tended to be of the J-14/Teen Bop variety, filled with girly things like outfit ideas, polls, cute little pixel dollz, and advice ...

  7. Garden-path sentence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden-path_sentence

    This is another commonly cited example. [4] Like the previous sentence, the initial parse is to read the complex houses as a noun phrase, but the complex houses married does not make semantic sense (only people can marry) and the complex houses married and single makes no sense at all (after married and..., the expectation is another verb to form a compound predicate).

  8. Literary nonsense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literary_nonsense

    Literary nonsense (or nonsense literature) is a broad categorization of literature that balances elements that make sense with some that do not, with the effect of subverting language conventions or logical reasoning. [1] Even though the most well-known form of literary nonsense is nonsense verse, the genre is present in many forms of literature.

  9. Nonsense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsense

    The sentence uttered is perfectly meaningful; what is nonsensical and meaningless is the fact that the person [a skeptic] has uttered it. To put the matter another way, we can make sense of the sentence [x]; we know what it asserts. But we cannot make sense of the man uttering it; we do not understand why he would utter it.