Well, in exactly the same way as the Swedish example, poetic/archaic registers of modern English can get away with it: 'Short term homes for the elderly infected' where 'infected' could be modifying 'elderly'. Just not standard registers.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Apr 29, 2020 6:07 pmI think they expressed it this way because they wanted to communicate that they ended the death penalty for minors, and also they ended floggings for everyone.Qwynegold wrote: ↑Wed Apr 29, 2020 11:43 am>_< Why did they put "and floggings" there?akam chinjir wrote: ↑Mon Apr 27, 2020 11:18 pm Saudi Arabia ends death penalty for minors and floggings
I feel that there should be a way to do this in English as well, but I can’t think of anything.Here's another Swedish one from me again, if anyone's interested:
Korttidsboende för äldre smittade
I interpreted that as:
[korttidsboende-∅ för äldre-∅] smitta-d-e
[short.term.home-PL for elder-PL] infect-PST.PTCP-PL
Short term homes for the elderly have been infected.
When they actually meant:
korttidsboende för [äldre-∅ smitta-d-e]
short.term.home.SG for [elder-PL infect-PST.PTCP-PL]
A short term home for the elder who have been infected.
Confusing headlines
Re: Confusing headlines
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Re: Confusing headlines
Sounds fine to me in standard English, because both elderly and infected are adjectives masquerading as nouns so either order works when you combine them into an NP:
the elderly man = adjective elderly
the infected man = adjective infected
the elderly infected = adjective elderly, nominalised plural infected
the infected elderly = adjective infected, nominalised plural elderly
Re: Confusing headlines
For me, ‘the infected elderly’ is fine, but ‘the elderly infected’ is not. I wonder why? (Possible explanation: maybe ‘elderly’ for me is a noun, whereas ‘infected’ is still an adjective and so cannot be modified when used as the head of an NP. But why has one become a noun while the other hasn’t?)chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 3:38 amSounds fine to me in standard English, because both elderly and infected are adjectives masquerading as nouns so either order works when you combine them into an NP:
the elderly man = adjective elderly
the infected man = adjective infected
the elderly infected = adjective elderly, nominalised plural infected
the infected elderly = adjective infected, nominalised plural elderly
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Re: Confusing headlines
Dead Sea Scroll fragments thought to be blank reveal text
(I personally didn’t find this one confusing, but I saw some other people complaining about it.)
(I personally didn’t find this one confusing, but I saw some other people complaining about it.)
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Re: Confusing headlines
Well, infected is an adjective because it's a past participle. Given the large number of -ed inflected participles, it'd be harder for one to acquire a new class or status than a word with a less productive / inflectional suffix like elderly.bradrn wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 4:06 am For me, ‘the infected elderly’ is fine, but ‘the elderly infected’ is not. I wonder why? (Possible explanation: maybe ‘elderly’ for me is a noun, whereas ‘infected’ is still an adjective and so cannot be modified when used as the head of an NP. But why has one become a noun while the other hasn’t?)
I'm still not sure that the elderly as noun analysis is correct though. Even when compared to irregular plural or mass nouns it doesn't show the same distribution. An example would be occurring as a bare plural or mass object:
I want food
I want data
I want children
???I want elderly
Re: Confusing headlines
But isn’t that because elderly is singular, while food, data, children are plural? But I will admit that elderly definitely doesn’t seem as ‘noun-y’ as most other nouns. So, then: if elderly isn’t a noun, then why can it be modified by an adjective?chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:16 amWell, infected is an adjective because it's a past participle. Given the large number of -ed inflected participles, it'd be harder for one to acquire a new class or status than a word with a less productive / inflectional suffix like elderly.bradrn wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 4:06 am For me, ‘the infected elderly’ is fine, but ‘the elderly infected’ is not. I wonder why? (Possible explanation: maybe ‘elderly’ for me is a noun, whereas ‘infected’ is still an adjective and so cannot be modified when used as the head of an NP. But why has one become a noun while the other hasn’t?)
I'm still not sure that the elderly as noun analysis is correct though. Even when compared to irregular plural or mass nouns it doesn't show the same distribution. An example would be occurring as a bare plural or mass object:
I want food
I want data
I want children
???I want elderly
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Re: Confusing headlines
Semantically and for the purposes of agreement elderly is plural when used as a noun, like any other zero nominalised adjective:bradrn wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:23 amBut isn’t that because elderly is singular, while food, data, children are plural? But I will admit that elderly definitely doesn’t seem as ‘noun-y’ as most other nouns. So, then: if elderly isn’t a noun, then why can it be modified by an adjective?chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:16 amWell, infected is an adjective because it's a past participle. Given the large number of -ed inflected participles, it'd be harder for one to acquire a new class or status than a word with a less productive / inflectional suffix like elderly.bradrn wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 4:06 am For me, ‘the infected elderly’ is fine, but ‘the elderly infected’ is not. I wonder why? (Possible explanation: maybe ‘elderly’ for me is a noun, whereas ‘infected’ is still an adjective and so cannot be modified when used as the head of an NP. But why has one become a noun while the other hasn’t?)
I'm still not sure that the elderly as noun analysis is correct though. Even when compared to irregular plural or mass nouns it doesn't show the same distribution. An example would be occurring as a bare plural or mass object:
I want food
I want data
I want children
???I want elderly
The infected are here
???The infected is here
The elderly are here
???The elderly is here
- KathTheDragon
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Re: Confusing headlines
This requires the definite article, however:chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:40 amSemantically and for the purposes of agreement elderly is plural when used as a noun, like any other zero nominalised adjective:
The infected are here
???The infected is here
The elderly are here
???The elderly is here
*Elderly are here
Note also:
I want the elderly
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Re: Confusing headlines
Yes, that's exactly the point. Elderly behaves like any other adjective, and can be nominalised as a plural only by adding the article. It doesn't behave like a plural or mass noun, which are nominal even without an article present.KathTheDragon wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:49 amThis requires the definite article, however:chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 5:40 amSemantically and for the purposes of agreement elderly is plural when used as a noun, like any other zero nominalised adjective:
The infected are here
???The infected is here
The elderly are here
???The elderly is here
*Elderly are here
Note also:
I want the elderly
Re: Confusing headlines
Alright then, so elderly is clearly an adjective — I do agree with this, given that it can only occur with the definite article. But none of this helps explain why it, unlike most adjectives, may be further modified by an adjective. Does anyone have any ideas?
(Also, this discussion is getting a bit long; should we split it off into a different thread maybe?)
(Also, this discussion is getting a bit long; should we split it off into a different thread maybe?)
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Re: Confusing headlines
Just to take this discussion back to this point, for me the analysis of 'the elderly infected' only works as a reversed (i.e. head initial) phrase where 'elderly' is the noun, and 'infected' has the adjectival role. This is only possible in poetic or consciously archaic registers (e.g. 'the light fantastic') - and occasionally, I feel, in newspaper headlines.bradrn wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 4:06 amFor me, ‘the infected elderly’ is fine, but ‘the elderly infected’ is not. I wonder why? (Possible explanation: maybe ‘elderly’ for me is a noun, whereas ‘infected’ is still an adjective and so cannot be modified when used as the head of an NP. But why has one become a noun while the other hasn’t?)chris_notts wrote: ↑Sat May 23, 2020 3:38 amSounds fine to me in standard English, because both elderly and infected are adjectives masquerading as nouns so either order works when you combine them into an NP:
the elderly man = adjective elderly
the infected man = adjective infected
the elderly infected = adjective elderly, nominalised plural infected
the infected elderly = adjective infected, nominalised plural elderly
As to the other question of why 'the elderly [adj] infected [noun]' doesn't work, I don't quite know. And lack terminology to try to express my instinct as to the reason. But it seems to me that there is a heirarchy going on here: 'the elderly' is a common adjective-derived noun IMO. It's actually the best noun in my idiolect for a really commonly discussed concept - better than phrases like 'old people' which can't take a definite article and is potentially insensitive, maybe only bested by phrases such as 'the over 75s' - which are of course less flexible.
Whereas 'the infected' just doesn't have the same kind of status in the lexicon in terms of familiarity and context: outside of zombie lit, it seems too strong even to be useful in the context of the pandemic (possibly because of this zombie association). So it just doesn't read comfortably as a head noun in my head - my brain would rather analyse this as poetic syntax.
Re: Confusing headlines
More than a dozen police officers were injured and 22 were arrested as fires and looting hit Philadelphia, the KOP Mall, and elsewhere.
ìtsanso, God In The Mountain, may our names inspire the deepest feelings of fear in urkos and all his ilk, for we have saved another man from his lies! I welcome back to the feast hall kal, who will never gamble again! May the eleven gods bless him!
kårroť
kårroť
Re: Confusing headlines
What’s confusing about this?
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- alynnidalar
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Re: Confusing headlines
It's ambiguous whether the 22 arrested were police officers or not. (they weren't, but it's easy to read it that way)
Re: Confusing headlines
Oh, right, I see it now.alynnidalar wrote: ↑Sun May 31, 2020 7:55 pm It's ambiguous whether the 22 arrested were police officers or not. (they weren't, but it's easy to read it that way)
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Re: Confusing headlines
Australian journalists attack outside White House raised with US government
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Re: Confusing headlines
Japan weighs up fewer spectators and mandatory COVID-19 for rescheduled Olympic Games
As one person commented: ‘Is mandatory Covid-19 really necessary. Will they have someone coughing on you as they arrive?’
As one person commented: ‘Is mandatory Covid-19 really necessary. Will they have someone coughing on you as they arrive?’
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Re: Confusing headlines
PG and Yorkshire Tea tell anti-racism opponents 'don't buy our tea' (BBC)
Since revised to read: PG and Yorkshire Tea tell Black Lives Matter critics 'don't buy our tea'
Since revised to read: PG and Yorkshire Tea tell Black Lives Matter critics 'don't buy our tea'
Re: Confusing headlines
This one’s not too confusing, but makes up for it in incomprehensability:
Dead cat bounce fears: Veteran stock picker says market jump may not last
Who knew that dead cats could bounce?
(The article explains: ‘“dead cat bounce” [is] a term used to describe a false, temporary recovery from a significant decline, or a bear market followed by a prolonged continuation of the downtrend.’)
Dead cat bounce fears: Veteran stock picker says market jump may not last
Who knew that dead cats could bounce?
(The article explains: ‘“dead cat bounce” [is] a term used to describe a false, temporary recovery from a significant decline, or a bear market followed by a prolonged continuation of the downtrend.’)
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Re: Confusing headlines
Hm, I've got the impression that "dead cat bounce" has been used for quite a while for "a period when numbers that have been going down for a while, such as economic indicators or politicians' poll numbers, temporarily go up, before going back to their previous downwards slide".