There's a definite grey zone of wordy word-like strings that are being cobbled together from chunks of other words, where it's very easy to imagine a possible definition for a word that sounds like that. Also, once or twice, I'm noticing things that feel like proper first names.
Meanwhile, the upper 10% of words includes highly specialized terms from niche sections of fields such as geology, chemistry and medicine, which arguably, are not words, even if you've seen them before. In some respects, a proper name isn't a word, and so, is a corporate invented product name really a word? Isn't that also a proper noun like "John" or "Texas"?
In this 10% grey area, I see a few words that I know to be words, but I cannot immediately tell you the definition, and if I were to try and use them in a sentence, I'd be able to apply the word class (noun, verb, adjective, adverb) within the structure of a sentence. But, I don't actually know the word. I only know that it's probably a word, but since I can't guess the definition or use it, I should dump it as an unknown, but more often than not, I'm getting away with some of these, mostly because after multiple passes, I can detect how the non-words are being generated, and the real words possess a more obvious validity of structure.
That said, I'm able to hover at or above 90% with occasional disembiggening penalties for over-cromulence.
Meanwhile, the upper 10% of words includes highly specialized terms from niche sections of fields such as geology, chemistry and medicine, which arguably, are not words, even if you've seen them before. In some respects, a proper name isn't a word, and so, is a corporate invented product name really a word? Isn't that also a proper noun like "John" or "Texas"?
In this 10% grey area, I see a few words that I know to be words, but I cannot immediately tell you the definition, and if I were to try and use them in a sentence, I'd be able to apply the word class (noun, verb, adjective, adverb) within the structure of a sentence. But, I don't actually know the word. I only know that it's probably a word, but since I can't guess the definition or use it, I should dump it as an unknown, but more often than not, I'm getting away with some of these, mostly because after multiple passes, I can detect how the non-words are being generated, and the real words possess a more obvious validity of structure.
That said, I'm able to hover at or above 90% with occasional disembiggening penalties for over-cromulence.