Greetings and feedback from here on the appreciated thread and link.

Fairly new here; please excuse what perhaps should be corrected in this
present reply - variations on theme would of course be useful.

Just for now may I call a surface *item* considered as a *part of speech* a
*'speech act'*, or maybe a token of a certain type or an *uttereme*, or
something else that seems appropriate to you.

*Does anyone perhaps  have a parser that can recognize the part of speech
(or 'speech act)' loadings in a program or set of programs and do labeling
or statistics or inferences about such - including yes "pronouns" and
"proverbs" ?.*

Just asking, from the perspective of "*Claim Structure Grammar* (*CSG*).
And also thanking the forum for these very interesting posts.

LDMF.
Dr. Linda D. Misek-Falkoff

 Schott <[email protected]> wrote:

> On page 10 of the following link we see, "A proverb is used to stand
> for a verb, just as a pronoun is used to stand for a noun. (The
> word proverb in this sense is found only in larger dictionaries.) For
> example:"
>
> http://www.jsoftware.com/books/pdf/arithmetic.pdf
>
> From a Google search of "site:jsoftware.com proverb".
>  ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm
>
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For information about J forums see http://www.jsoftware.com/forums.htm

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