• @Vigge93
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    English
    12 months ago

    Buffalo bison that other Buffalo bison bully also bully Buffalo bison.

    There are three groups, the bullies, the bullied bullies, and the bullied.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      12 months ago

      American bisons from the city of Buffalo: (Buffalo buffalo)

      [that]

      American bisons from the city of Buffalo confuse: (Buffalo buffalo buffalo)

      [also]

      confuse American bisons from the city of Buffalo: (buffalo Buffalo buffalo)

      Syracuse cows Syracuse cows confuse confuse Syracuse cows.

      This sentence probably worked better at a time when “buffalo” was actually a commonly used verb. It’s also made really confusing by using a “reduced relative clause” in a way that almost no native speaker would use it.

      You can use a reduced relative clause in ways that aren’t at all confusing, like:

      “The burger I ate was delicious” vs. with a normal relative clause “The burger that I ate was delicious”.

      But this one is more like:

      “Gazelles lions eat are slow.” vs. “Gazelles that lions eat are slow.”

      I don’t know what exactly it is, but that is much more confusing. Maybe because the distinction between the subject (Gazelles) and the relative clause ([that] lions eat) is much less obvious, making it hard to parse.