The distinction comes down to identity-first vs. person-first phrasing.The two phrases highlight different nuances: “Lesbian daughter" uses "lesbian" as an adjective to define the noun (daughter). It prioritizes the orientation as a primary descriptor of the individual. “Daughter who is a lesbian" uses person-first language. It emphasizes that she is a daughter first, and her being a lesbian is just one aspect of who she is.
One generation or two before humans no long have schools or memories because YouTube will teach you anything you wanna know, and AI means never bothering to learn anything.
3 comments:
AI….Actual Idiocy
Also from AI:
The distinction comes down to identity-first vs. person-first phrasing.The two phrases highlight different nuances:
“Lesbian daughter" uses "lesbian" as an adjective to define the noun (daughter). It prioritizes the orientation as a primary descriptor of the individual.
“Daughter who is a lesbian" uses person-first language. It emphasizes that she is a daughter first, and her being a lesbian is just one aspect of who she is.
One generation or two before humans no long have schools or memories because YouTube will teach you anything you wanna know, and AI means never bothering to learn anything.
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