The Human sentence is subject to the constraints of Semantic Rules.
Denotatively, they are correct, when they call it a chair, but Connotatively, they miss the point. To me, a chair is a very unpleasant word that I even hate to mention.
Connotative meanings, then, are not helpful for the communication process. Notably, the symbolic communication of many Autistic children is often highly connotative.
An autistic child may say, "Throw the baby out the window," and simply mean, "Time for lunch."
Distinctive Features: We have remarked about the awesome power that the ability to combine words into a sentence gives to the communication process.
Inseparable from the human sentence are the constraints of grammar. There are , however, further constraints at the Semantic level.