on Sun, 19 Oct 2003 04:10:38AM -0700, Erik Steffl insinuated: > Monique Y. Herman wrote: > >On Fri, 17 Oct 2003 at 22:37 GMT, Erik Steffl penned: > > > >> english has a fairly simple a regular grammar so it's fairly easy > >> to create english based programming language - the basic control > >> structures are pretty much english sentences. > >> > >> This would be fairly hard todo in other languages that has more > >> irregular grammar (the ones I know anything about have a lot more > >> complicated/irregular grammar). > > > > > >Hrm. German and Latin are much more regular than English. French is, > >too, iirc. English has a *lot* of irregularity. > > german is regular?
more so than english, yes. > with each word changing depending on how it's used in sentence > (case)??? that's quite regular -- it's called declension, and is well-documented in any introductory german text. > gender being pretty much random? that has nothing at all to do with the grammar -- you're talking about the lexicon. the gender of german nouns is as arbitrary as the phonemes that make up english words -- both have some historical background, but none may make any sense. both are just items to be memorized when learning the language -- just as we map "fork" to our concept of that thing with tines we use to eat broccoli, germans map "die Gabel" onto the same thing -- a word, and a gender to go with it. same deal. > in english there are few cases of irregularity (past tense/past > participle of some verbs, few words have non-standard way to create > plural and that's pretty much it). each words has at most few forms, > easily recongizable (as in: the forms are created in same way for > almost all the words). again, lexicon. this point has nothing to do with the "regularity" of language. > and the structure of the sentence is pretty simple as well. clearly, you've never tried to map it out. go on, then, i dare you -- write me a regular grammar that can express the grammar of english. > compare that to german where each words has number of forms > (depending on what it relates to), declension > and these forms are created in different ways for different words. all part of the lexicon. > example: in english, if I know the verb (one word) I can pretty much > use it in a sentence. how many forms of each verb in german do you > need to know to be able to use it in a sentence? a root form (lexical); a knowledge of its behavior (also lexical); the basic rules for declension (a regular part of grammar). answer: one. </nori> -- .~. nori @ sccs.swarthmore.edu /V\ http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/~nori/jnl/ // \\ @ maenad.net /( )\ www.maenad.net ^`~'^ get my (*new*) key here: http://www.maenad.net/geek/gpg/7ede5499.asc (please *remove* old key 11e031f1!)
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