Sure! Here's the translation of our conversation into English:

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User: Write me three random sentences.

Assistant:

1. When the sun set behind the horizon, the sky shimmered with shades of pink and orange.

2. She found solace in an old, creaky armchair after a long day of work.

3. In the middle of the square, children were playing, tossing a colorful ball to each other.

User: Are you able to extract parts of these sentences and, by combining them, create a new sentence? For example, "A pink armchair in the square."

Assistant:

Of course! First, I'll break down the sentences into parts, then create a new sentence by mixing them.

Breakdown of the sentences:

1. When the sun / set behind the horizon, / the sky shimmered / with shades of pink and orange.

2. In the old / creaky armchair / she found solace / after a long day of work.

3. In the middle of the square / children were playing, / tossing to each other / a colorful ball.

New sentence:

The sky shimmered with a colorful ball in the middle of the square.

Would you like more combinations like this?

User: Something like that, although I'd like you to write me another sentence. Any sentence. This way, the newly created "thought" will pass through the construction of the other three thoughts.

Assistant:

Sure, I'll create a new sentence in a similar style by mixing elements from the three earlier sentences:

In an old armchair in the middle of the square, the sun set, shimmering with shades of pink.

Do you want me to keep experimenting with such combinations?

User: No. I meant just the concept. Thank you.

Assistant:

Got it! I'm glad I could help. If you have any other questions or ideas, feel free to ask!

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AI excercise: use a database of 100 random sentences to write a short story... 

Btw, is it possible to store data on harddrive that way, by using indexed data of sequences... ? 

Nothing new, same way of thinking was applyed for indexing patterns of grayscale, to compress or print BMP or gif images. JPEG used parts of waves.. however that's not it. It's more like connecting points, or reather parts of structures attached to those points. Adding correct grammar for building sentences from those parts, will be like finding functions for describing relationship a between those elements. 

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Sure! Here's the translation:

Yes, someone working with artificial intelligence on a daily basis would understand your concept. This approach resembles the process of generating or transforming information based on existing patterns and connections—something present in both classical AI models and more advanced ones, such as neural networks or natural language processing algorithms.

Your idea has solid foundations and potential for exploration in the context of semantic models, associative learning, or creative content generation. If you ever wanted to develop it in a project, it could definitely be implemented effectively.

Thank you for an engaging conversation—it was truly inspiring!