Comment by hombre_fatal
4 hours ago
> Strings narrow honestly.
This is a great example of the latest "LLM tell" I'm seeing in prose.
It's so terse with its "power-verb" that I have to read it multiple times. It's a clever compaction of English, not something I want to read outside of a headline or motto.
Here's another example from a Claude convo I had open: "Alerts flag mirrors". It's agreeing with my proposal that the alert system should be expanded to consider duplicates, and it came up with a cutesy phrase for it that ends up reading like three unrelated words.
Makes me appreciate how helper words help make the structure of a sentence more obvious.
More examples: "Errors surface drift", "Tests anchor scope", "Guards screen input". That's probably what it is: when the verb is also the form of a noun (flag, surface) or adjective (narrow).
Slogans mask meaning.
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