One other way of putting the reverse order, though it sounds a bit stilted in English: “beagles have Fido”. I don’t think it’s used commonly at all but it came to mind as a form in the reverse order without looping.
Sure, we can do all sort of things with language if we put our minds to it. That’s not the point. What’s important is how do people actually use language. In the corpus of texts used to train, say, GPT-4, how many times is the phrase “beagles have Fido” likely to have occurred?
One other way of putting the reverse order, though it sounds a bit stilted in English: “beagles have Fido”. I don’t think it’s used commonly at all but it came to mind as a form in the reverse order without looping.
Sure, we can do all sort of things with language if we put our minds to it. That’s not the point. What’s important is how do people actually use language. In the corpus of texts used to train, say, GPT-4, how many times is the phrase “beagles have Fido” likely to have occurred?