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1. NiloCK+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-07-07 01:50:16
The most obvious case of this is in terms of `an apple` vs `a pear`. LLMs never get the a-an distinction wrong, because their internal state 'knows' the word that'll come next.
replies(1): >>3eb798+sd
2. 3eb798+sd[view] [source] 2025-07-07 04:35:20
>>NiloCK+(OP)
If I give an LLM a fragment of text that starts with, "The fruit they ate was an <TOKEN>", regardless of any plan, the grammatically correct answer is going to force a noun starting with a vowel. How do you disentangle the grammar from planning?

Going to be a lot more "an apple" in the corpus than "an pear"

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