06.03
In General News | Tags: grammar, grammatical subdivision, grammatical system, WordSmith
Work’s going a little slow this week as I have a lot on my plate, especially starting my internship (32 hour week). Â I’m brushing up WordSmith here and there, trying to improve the dictionary analysis quality so renders choose more appropriate words. What worked well for drums is taking quite a bit more messing with to work well for other instruments.
Unfortunately I’m having doubts concerning the viability of grammatical subdividion with non-percussive instruments. Â While it may be possible, I think it’s lacking in structure. Â Perhaps there also needs to be a higher-order grammatical structure to guide motifs so that they do not lack direction.
The question is, then, how does one classify a higher-order grammar? Â What symbols make up such a grammar? Â Perhaps phrases could be classified as “suspenseful,” “tense,” or “declining.” Â Of course there could be loads of other adjectives. Â The point is that sentences. Â Sense do not make? Â When words a sense of direction lack! Â Yes, that was a bit of a punny example of how grammar can go wrong.
Rough days ahead for algorithmic composition. Â Fasten your seatbelts and keep a pale ready for sea-sickness. Â We will be experiencing some turbulent, nonsensical grammar.
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