[net.lang] The Meaning of Liff.

gordon@warwick.UUCP (Gordon Joly) (05/12/86)

Walking to work this morning, listening to my personal hi-fi, I noticed
how difficult it was to cross the road. I was missing vital information
about the position and velocity of cars.
If  I  was  conversing with  some  sort of intelligent  system, I would
convey  meaning not only by the  use of the language  of discourse, but
also by  the use of vocal  inflection and facial signals.  It often the
case that we still use visual language whilst talking on the telephone.
It also seems that the `language of discourse' is important. English is
renowned  for its  rich vocabulary, but it is  possible to express some 
subtle ideas more succinctly in other languages.

Gordon Joly -- {seismo,ucbvax,decvax}!mcvax!ukc!warwick!gordon

Meta-Story. When I want to describe a cat, I say the word "cat".  Every
child knows what I mean by the word cat.  "Teach me cat..." OK, here we
go, lets see what the dictionary says.
"cat" - feline creature. OK what's "feline"?
"feline" - catlike. Could someone please show me a cat?
Well, we are not getting very far with this. Lets try some other words.
Look up "gweek".  Ah, yes, thats clear enough - "coathanger used as car
aerial".
Now look up "liff"...

The Joka (pronounced joker).

gordon@warwick.UUCP (Gordon Joly) (05/12/86)

Apologies, I meant net.nlang NOT net.lang. Please ammend any followup.

Gordon Joly -- {seismo,ucbvax,decvax}!mcvax!ukc!warwick!gordon