Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2022
In the first part of this paper, two arguments, one by Chomsky, and one by Bar-Hillel and Shamir, are examined in detail and rejected. Both arguments purport to show that the structure of English precludes its having a finite state grammar which correctly enumerates just the well formed sentences of English.
In the latter part of the paper I consider the problem of supporting claims about the structure and properties of a natural language when no grammar for the language has yet been accepted.
This article is the third chapter of the book, Applications of the Mathematical Theory of Linguistics, to be published by Mouton and Company, The Hague (Janus Linguarum series).