"must" is more normally normative, even though they overlap in meaning obviously. I tend to use "should do" more
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Replying to @o_guest @russel_winder
Yeah,
@robsmallshire pointed out that https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt is actually a pretty good guide to levels here.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
a normative guide to language nothing wrong with that
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In a certain sense a language *is* a normative guide to how to make noises and marks on paper. ;-)
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I think pragmatics of normative are being relaxed now to the point of losing a lot of semantics
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Replying to @o_guest @DRMacIver and
yes, language has a set of rules (grammar) but the rules themselves are not subject to strict rules
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Replying to @o_guest
I don't think normative implies strict rules? "Explicit is better than implicit" is a normative claim with no strict prescription.
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Replying to @DRMacIver
hmm, so let's think of examples "heteronormative" to mean implies "don't be gay", pretty prescriptive no?
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Replying to @o_guest
In general prescriptive is a subset of normative, and compound terms often acquire significantly more specific meanings.
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Replying to @DRMacIver
being normative about language semantics never works out. Saying words are strict subsets of others doesn't fully make sense.
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that's literally not how our brains compute semantics. Your temporal lobe is not set theoretic.
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