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C. Adverbs and Conjunctions

Unlike verbs, adverbs and conjunctions have fixed valence: an adverb is monadic (applying to a single argument to its left), and a conjunction is dyadic.

Conjunctions and adverbs apply to noun or verb arguments; a conjunction may produce as many as four distinct classes of results.

For example, u&v produces a composition of the verbs u and v; and ^&2 produces the square by bonding the power function with the right argument 2; and 2&^ produces the function 2-to-the-power. The conjunction & may therefore be referred to by different names for the different cases, or it may be referred to by the single term and (or with), which roughly covers all cases.




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