And the Simple / Basic english provides for breaking up of many complex 
compound sentences, for shorter structures, that even without the vocabulary 
reduction increases the ability to parse sentences greatly.

There is even a Simple English wikipedia, though it seems to lack many articles 
and information.

James Ratcliff

Jean-Paul Van Belle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:    Hi Mike
  
 Just Google 'Ogden' and/or Basic English - there's lots of info.
 And if you doubt that only a few verbs are sufficient, then obviously you need 
to do some reading: anyone interested in building AGI should be familiar with 
Schank's (1975) contextual dependency theory "which deals with the 
representation of meaning in sentences. Building upon this framework, Schank & 
Abelson (1977) introduced the concepts of scripts, plans and themes to handle 
story-level understanding. Later work (e.g., Schank, 1982,1986) elaborated the 
theory to encompass other aspects of cognition." 
[http://tip.psychology.org/schank.html]
 A number of other researchers have also worked on the concept of a few 
semantic primitives (one called them semantic primes) but I'd be a bad teacher 
if I did *your* homework for you... ;-)
  
 Jean-Paul
  
    
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 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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>>> "Mike Tintner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 2007/06/05 16:48:32 >>>

  Except that Ogden only included a very few verbs [be , have , come - go , put 
- take , give - get , make , keep , let , do , say , see , send , cause and 
because are occasionally used as operators; seem was later added.] So in 
practice people use about 60 of the nouns as verbs diminishing the 
'unambiguity' somewhat. Also most words are seriously polysemous. But it is a 
very good/interesting starting point!
 = Jean-Paul
  
 How does that work? The first 12 verbs above are among the most general, 
infinitely-meaningful and therefore ambiguous words in the language. There are 
an infinity of ways to "come" or "go" to a place.

 
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James Ratcliff - http://falazar.com
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