Nuclear Sentence

(aka Kernel Sentence)

Intent

Simplify sentences and their clausal extensions.

Motivation

People often express their ideas using complex sentences. Such complex sentences, while ordinary and natural enough in conversations, can hinder how others construe them. Conversely, simplicity promotes clarity, construction, interpretation, and understanding.

Applicability

Use nuclear sentences when

  • you want to simplify statements made by policymakers, domain experts, and usage stakeholders, and
  • you want their policy, problem, and usage statements to conform to a consistent format.

Considerations

Simple sentences help people communicate more effectively. While there are no ultimate guarantees of effectiveness, simple sentences increase the likelihood that people will actually duplicate and construe them similarly. The essential nucleus of a simple English sentence resembles the following structural form:

Nuclear Sentence= Subject Predicate
Predicate= Verb Object ( Preposition Phrase ) *
Verb= Active Voice, Present Tense, Singular Number,
+ Indicative Mood, Affirmative Polarity
Prepositional Phrase= Preposition Object
Subject= Noun Phrase w/Third Person, Singular Number
Object= Noun Phrase
Noun Phrase= Article ( Adjective ) * ( Noun ) +

The nuclear sentence structure provides readers with a consistent way to parse and construe sentences. Such simplicity reduces ambiguity (or makes it more obvious) and contributes to a better understanding of a subject while retaining (sometimes even revealing) essential meaning.

Certain grammatical transformations preserve meaning while simplifying and converging on the nuclear sentence structure. Many of the EDUCE language patterns focus on these grammatical transformations.

Consequences

Each simple sentence and each clause (in a complex sentence) has a normal form, which is based on a nuclear sentence. You can move toward sentence normal form using an isolated subject and an isolated verb.

The sentence normal form offers people a consistent way to construct, parse, and construe sentences. Such consistency helps people share their understanding of a subject matter, thereby fostering commonality.