Friday, January 19, 2024

Verb/quotes/comment/notes/1/19/2024

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Aloha


Verb

quote

As far as we know, every language makes a grammatical distinction that looks like a noun verb distinction.".[1] Possibly because of the graph-like nature of communicated meaning by humans, i.e. nouns being the "entities" and verbs being the "links" between them.[2]

from wiki, verb

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quote

In knowledge representation and reasoning, a knowledge graph is a knowledge base that uses a graph-structured data model or topology to represent and operate on data. Knowledge graphs are often used to store interlinked descriptions of entities – objects, events, situations or abstract concepts – while also encoding the semantics or relationships underlying these entities.[1]

Example conceptual diagram

Since the development of the Semantic Web, knowledge graphs have often been associated with linked open data projects, focusing on the connections between concepts and entities.[2][3] They are also historically associated with and used by search engines such as Google, Bing, Yext and Yahoo; knowledge-engines and question-answering services such as WolframAlpha, Apple's Siri, and Amazon Alexa; and social networks such as LinkedIn and Facebook.

from Wiki, Knowledge Graph

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comment, mine, to youtube vlog thread about mysteries of ancient walls- polygons, nobs, butterfly clamps, keystones-and just being big!

false cognates...in Linguistcs, words that sound, look, alike, but have different meanings...around the ancient world there are similar motifs, pyramids, winged snakes, meanders-rituals and such...but while they look the same, they may not have meant the same...as to nobs and butterfly clamps, parallel technology?...birds building nests in characteilstic ways I've readsaid is learned when they are chicks in the nest seeing their parents make the nest...to go back to linguistics, that's how are Native Language is learned, in babbling back and forths between infants and parents that becomes more sophisticated...there is savant like skills in infants...savants like reach into nothing, and pull stuff out...magicians with rabbit and top hat...THAT is cross cultural and ancient, I'd say.

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quote

Philosopher Raïssa Maritain, wife of philosopher Jacques Maritain, writes that during her era of the 1940s this translation was found to be the most acceptable by modern scholars. Her own conclusion was stated as being in agreement with Theodore of Mopsuestia, that being the "bread we need." This was seen as vague enough to cover what was viewed as the three possible etymological meanings: (1) literal – the "bread of tomorrow or the bread of the present day," (2) analogical – the "bread we need in order to subsist," and (3) spiritual/mystical – the bread "which is above our substance" (i.e., supersubstantial).[37]

from wiki, Epiousion (ἐπιούσιον) is a Koine Greek adjective used in the Lord's Prayer verse "Τὸν ἄρτον ἡμῶν τὸν ἐπιούσιον δὸς ἡμῖν σήμερον"[a] ('Give us today our epiousion bread').

unquote

Notes: yesterday, noun, today, verb, and I happen on the same quote of David Adger, with the added "graph-like" link which I pursued and found "knowledge graphs"...aaand then, browsing awhile, let fly, Longfellow arrow like, a comment to the youtuber going on about polygon walls...hmmph...there is something about nouns and verbs...in physics there is matter and energy, in chemistry bonds and reactions, in sports, opposing teams, math, plus and minus, odd and even, night and day, yin yang...dualities abound, but not necessarily the same, or bespeak some grand connection...more likely many false cognates...but, but Linguistics is an old old pursuit, the studies of the Bible like it was a download from a distant star was the forerunner of all the sciences...St. Jerome worried over a single word,
supersubstantial...

Aloha,

:)

DavidDavid

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