(Aytundra's)-Colour-Grammar
RRM wrote:the green...the yellow
Correct colour-grammar.
RRM wrote:I like the green
Ah it is sort of an Incorrect colour-grammar. {no,no, never... "the" truncated in the middle stranded in green? when it is a blue word; Blue words rarely ever contain the letter "r", i.e. technical, the, this, that, these, those, them (BUT there are these exceptions: there, three, through, computer...{no, skip these, these are blue still because the "h" and "u" and "m". orange yellowy light brown inverses as blue in meaning and the r plays a minimal role.})}
SUCH A LITTLE POST IS CAUSING CHAOS TO MY GRAMMAR SYSTEM (have been tackling it for a week)...
But it is like "to go", you never split "to go" it gets highlighted all in one spot? - (splitting an infinitive) - grammar-aytundra
sooo it is correct?right? it is okay right? justified right? - synaesthesia-grammar-aytundra
i don't know? nobody messes-up with (i mean challenges) my grammar because no one ever talks to me in colour. - synaesthesia-aytundra
i like colour grammar talk!

- aytundra
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Mostly colours of the word highlights the word. Usually from the first letter to the end of the word like:
the
yellow
the
yellow
Less frequently is it from the middle letters to the whole word;
like g
reen
becomes
green.
Seldom are words coloured "in meaning" (not actually coloured) reads as the inverse colour, red-green, blue-yellow/orange/lightbrown
like
red*
becomes
red in meaning.
like
pink*
becomes
pink in meaning.
like leaf
becomes
green in meaning, because of the
a, but remains
leaf
like tea
becomes
green in meaning, because of the
a, but remains
tea on paper/computer.
like
grass is sooooo green if you know what I mean, as "a" and "s" becomes green in meaning.
*these were very hard to figure out when I was 3,4,5 or 6 years old, don't get me started on how I drafted a treaty with the word "purple".
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"The" never gets highlighted by the word colour, it just looks bizarre.
"The" is like a flashlight (as are words like This, That, These, Those, There, Them, Then {AND I ABSOLUTELY despise regular GRAMMARIANS that say "the" is a definite article, no, "Th" is first and fore most works like a flashlight. It is a flashlight article before any other numeric-constraint articles, just like the word computer is not green just because it has an r, it has a lot of blues.})
"I like th
e green" can be highlighted in purple by the "
e"
"I like
the green" (is so-so, it is okaay to make it purple; but then it misses the point that green is green.)
(most foods, and objects are never purple like aubergine or grapes, so the "e" functions as a thought word or
emotion word, to mask a sentence as a thought sentence. Also works nicely with french feminine words that get tagged with the purple pink e ending.)
"I like
the green", its okaay, but not the best, purple is when I get emotional on the significance of the words I am quoting.
"I like
the green",feels a lot better, all the "Th" sentence starters can easily highlight sentences blue. But still misses the point in making green green.
I like the
green. Yeah that is the regular standard.
But (when I am reading) I really read "Th" sentence starters like this...and the "and" to catch the nouns.
The
green represents fruits
and nuts.
The blue colour is for something technically descriptive {cooked too!}, subjective by the speaker {cooked up by the speakers' perspective}.
(i.e. He likes the green, I like the yellow, we can all agree to disagree that everyone does not have the same favourite colours.)
Why do "Th" words act as a flashlight?
To use the "h" in these words is to use it as a light. "h" is all yellowy-mildly orange (usually h is brown like as in "honey brown"), but next to the blue "T" it is nice to have the contrast of blue and yellow so the "h" gets a shade lighter and warmer closer to a "honey orange", and it acts like a flash light to shine on the object or idea that it is speaking of i.e.
The oranges rolled off the counter top. (Mask the sentence in blue, and leave the noun and verb masked in the yellowy-orange flashlight of "h".).
RRM wrote:Because the green as representing fruits and nuts was predominant.
Subject
-word agreement { (Yes I spelled it wrong on purposeI hate "Subject
-verb agreement", again I despise regular GRAMMARIANS because it is misnamed, the subject is about numerics, the verb state of have be do... are not relevant, the main issue is numbers and words, it is not about the action of the words, so please don't use "verb" Subject-verb agreement, it is like having Agriculturalist define the Precambrian era and using incorrect words oh look "the dinosaur is eating a veggie". Cummon,please use proper language, "the dinosaur ate a plant.")
"
fruits and nuts was predominant."
"fruit
s and nut
s "w
er
e" predominant." {purple after red please.}