Wednesday, August 2, 2023

Fundamental property of a sentence

EVERY string of words (collection of successive words) from the beginning of any sentence, BEARS/HAS AS A PROPERTY, the next adjacent word. Lets see this in the case of some examples - 1) John has a book. John + has : John has the property of having. (John what? John has). (John has) + a : John's having/possession has the property of oneness. (John has what? John has one 'something'). (John has a) + book : John's possession of oneness has the property of book. (John has one what? John has one book). 2) John has trouble working. John + has : John has the property of having. (John what? John has). (John has) + trouble : John's having has the property of (the possession of) trouble. (John has what? John has trouble) (John has trouble) + working : John's having trouble has as a property the attribute of working. (John has trouble with what? John has trouble with working). 3) Pictures of John have great value. Pictures + of : Pictures have the property of being owned/represented by. (Pictures what? Pictures of something) (Pictures of) + John : Ownership of pictures has the property of John as its beholder. (Pictures of whom? Pictures of John). (Pictures of John) + have : Ownership of pictures by John has the property of possessing/having. (Pictures of John what? Pictures of John have something) (Pictures of John have) + great : Ownership of pictures by John has the property of possessing/having greatness. (Pictures of John have what? Pictures of John have greatness). (Pictures of John have a great) + value : Ownership of pictures by JOhn has the property of possessing/having greatness which has the property of being the attribute of value. (Pictures of John have greatness of what? Pictures of John have greatness of value). 4) Experience has been unkind to John. "Experience has" : The experience (which John has had) bears the property of having something (unkindness). "Experience has been" : The having of the experience bears the property of being. "Experience has been unkind" : The being of the having of the experience bears the property of unkindness. "Experience has been unkind to" : The unkindness of the being of the having of the experience, bears the property of being towards something (John) "Experience has been unkind to John" : The towardness of the being of the unkindness of the being of the having of the experience, bears the property of John.

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