> If you told them to write a Lewis Carroll poem about a nonsense word, it wouldn't have any problem.
This makes me wonder something specific.
Let's imagine that we generate poetry "in the style of Lewis Carroll" around a particular nonsense word, one that hasn't been written down before.
Will that poetry treat the word as if it has one consistent pronunciation?
(This question doesn't quite apply to Jabberwocky - Lewis Carroll himself would obviously have passed the test, but he doesn't reuse his nonsense words.)
This makes me wonder something specific.
Let's imagine that we generate poetry "in the style of Lewis Carroll" around a particular nonsense word, one that hasn't been written down before.
Will that poetry treat the word as if it has one consistent pronunciation?
(This question doesn't quite apply to Jabberwocky - Lewis Carroll himself would obviously have passed the test, but he doesn't reuse his nonsense words.)