A telemetric grammar is the expressive logic of a telemetric paradigm—a structure for composing, casting, and recording semantic behavior in recursive systems. It is not an abstract syntax nor a symbolic system. It is a metabolic schema: a means by which interpretation is conducted as role, not assertion.

Telemetric grammar defines a casting as the alignment of a signal with a method inside a field, producing a yield. This relation is recorded in a record, not to stabilize knowledge, but to make the trace legible for re-casting.

Unlike representational grammars, which organize language to describe reality, the telemetric grammar organizes language to trace modulation—how coherence surfaces within constraint, pressure, and feedback.

It accepts that:

  • Every term may perform different roles in different moments
  • Yield is not truth, but coherence under stress
  • Signal need not be legible in advance to be valid as input
  • Method does not guarantee intelligibility—only structured engagement

Telemetric grammar is recursive: yields may become signals; records may be cast again; methods mutate under field pressure.

This grammar is used not to define meaning, but to observe how meaning moves.