Ambiguity, thy name is English - N

What is this?
Since there are so many words missing in english (and not just american english), the common words are given the task of having multiple meanings. How does one know which meaning to apply? The common answer is context. As in "how many translators from english does it take to replace a light bulb?" - "depends on the context".With today's communications, there's often no context. Text is often squeezed into tiny spaces (cell phone screens, button captions, road and other signs). It's easy to put together two or three words, all of them loaded with multiple meanings, and divine their intended meanings from all the possible combinations, for any context that may apply.
1-I-2005 - 11-IX-2015 go home  
Expression
...may mean any of
naked conductor runs along the trolley car
naked conductor runs along the trolley car, because the driver was busy and too fat
naked conductor runs along the trolley car because they were cheap on electric safety
name cleanup routine
routine which cleans up names
give a name to a cleanup routine
negative patient care outcome
negative outcome of patient care
outcome of care about a negative patient
outcome of negative care about a patient
negative outcome of care about a patient
new car prices
new prices of cars
prices of new cars
new music lovers
lovers of new music
new lovers of music
nice looking glass
nice mirror
a glass which looks nice (the transparent material)
a glass vessel for liquid which (the glass, not liquid) looks nice
no transfer reason
the transfer reason is not given
the reason why there is no transfer
not: what we can not imagine
what we are able to avoid imagining
what we are unable to imagine