According to linguists, this ability is due to internal mental representations that help humans recognize linguistic patterns and integrate words into meaningful phrases, even if they are not familiar. Researchers explain that humans possess an amazing ability to talk about almost anything, and they often form sentences that have never been spoken or written before. Instead of adhering strictly to rigid syntactic structures, it appears that humans rely on their ability to flexibly combine familiar linguistic units in daily speech, and sometimes on complete improvisation. 'Sai Tek Daily' states that human language does not depend on complex grammatical rules to the extent that linguists had assumed for decades. For many years, researchers assumed that sentence construction is based on...
Human language is not based on strict grammatical rules
Linguists claim that the human ability to talk about almost anything is not based on strict grammatical structures, but on the skill of flexibly combining familiar linguistic units and improvising. This ability is linked to internal mental representations.