Editing Talk:1571: Car Model Names

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;Order of the scores
 
;Order of the scores
 
There are two possible explanations
 
There are two possible explanations
;Score(x) = Frequency_in_cars(x) - Frequency_in_English(x)
+
;Score(x) = Frecuency_in_cars(x) - Frequency_in_English(x)
 
I'm pretty sure it's a comparative scale between cars and English, not just a car-like/not-car-like scale.
 
I'm pretty sure it's a comparative scale between cars and English, not just a car-like/not-car-like scale.
 
:Randall uses positive numbers if a letter is more common in car models than in typical English (as X) which he then calls carlike. He used negative numbers if a letter's relative frequency in car models is lower than in typical English (as O) and he calls it English-like (more suitable for readable text). The letters F and B, with scores of 5 and -5, respectively, are about as common in English as in car models. With this nomenclature, the most English-like letter is Y because, while not the most common English letter, it is apparently extremely rare in car models.
 
:Randall uses positive numbers if a letter is more common in car models than in typical English (as X) which he then calls carlike. He used negative numbers if a letter's relative frequency in car models is lower than in typical English (as O) and he calls it English-like (more suitable for readable text). The letters F and B, with scores of 5 and -5, respectively, are about as common in English as in car models. With this nomenclature, the most English-like letter is Y because, while not the most common English letter, it is apparently extremely rare in car models.

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