From bpfk-list+bncCMbnveiNHRC42-LqBBoEwtvhXg@googlegroups.com Sun Feb 13 20:21:31 2011 Received: from mail-pw0-f61.google.com ([209.85.160.61]) by chain.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.72) (envelope-from ) id 1PopwD-0002jW-2A; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:31 -0800 Received: by pwi2 with SMTP id 2sf2641426pwi.16 for ; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:18 -0800 (PST) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=googlegroups.com; s=beta; h=domainkey-signature:mime-version:x-beenthere:received-spf:date :message-id:to:subject:from:x-original-sender :x-original-authentication-results:reply-to:precedence:mailing-list :list-id:list-post:list-help:list-archive:sender:list-subscribe :list-unsubscribe:content-type:content-transfer-encoding; bh=O7ZqbenhRZJJl5hzLR7aJJm3mkd31Z6SUS0/KFGd6VE=; b=YqFndSEDWbMDJq29NT/xCo4uDci9a7/tK8bQ/nn6Gf6bBUAS5wDcvNFw2YWkuOaRRB 89feU5U6EAlcBeu1kKmRtZbxuh0vK+20W6rFFF/fXWMHY/vg8pWvZ9OeG5zG4noxbH/I x/wNm50wd8zwbZHoLKxYNTSwAZSuN5Ysapi20= DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; c=nofws; d=googlegroups.com; s=beta; h=mime-version:x-beenthere:received-spf:date:message-id:to:subject :from:x-original-sender:x-original-authentication-results:reply-to :precedence:mailing-list:list-id:list-post:list-help:list-archive :sender:list-subscribe:list-unsubscribe:content-type :content-transfer-encoding; b=PS0ES+ztavD0W2SjcegcqGMuL0aJuR6av2xV6/D1fvag9ehJrQPxbOkXWr/xMJPKVC tdm1D6WN+uLSnYlHnx2zzIJ1DyTD50kSAkjCipV0r73F0bsZhvCyfGiOYVbTXvCxmQBU TJCbbfadsFYe3/pwDFeG11AahQ6GnhaVLgiJM= Received: by 10.142.101.9 with SMTP id y9mr244005wfb.12.1297657272385; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:12 -0800 (PST) MIME-Version: 1.0 X-BeenThere: bpfk-list@googlegroups.com Received: by 10.142.2.41 with SMTP id 41ls6676638wfb.0.p; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:11 -0800 (PST) Received: by 10.142.178.6 with SMTP id a6mr705278wff.40.1297657271247; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:11 -0800 (PST) Received: by 10.142.178.6 with SMTP id a6mr705277wff.40.1297657271214; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:11 -0800 (PST) Received: from chain.digitalkingdom.org (digitalkingdom.org [173.13.139.234]) by gmr-mx.google.com with ESMTPS id f13si2676353wfo.0.2011.02.13.20.21.11 (version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=OTHER); Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:11 -0800 (PST) Received-SPF: pass (google.com: best guess record for domain of nobody@digitalkingdom.org designates 173.13.139.234 as permitted sender) client-ip=173.13.139.234; Received: from nobody by chain.digitalkingdom.org with local (Exim 4.72) (envelope-from ) id 1Popvx-0002jN-HL for bpfk-list@googlegroups.com; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:09 -0800 Received: from 128-177-28-49.ip.openhosting.com ([128.177.28.49] helo=oh-www1.lojban.org) by chain.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.72) (envelope-from ) id 1Popvs-0002j5-9A for bpfk@lojban.org; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 20:21:09 -0800 Received: from www-data by oh-www1.lojban.org with local (Exim 4.72) (envelope-from ) id 1Popvr-0005fE-Eb for bpfk@lojban.org; Sun, 13 Feb 2011 23:21:03 -0500 Date: Sun, 13 Feb 2011 23:21:03 -0500 Message-Id: To: bpfk@lojban.org Subject: [bpfk] dag-cll git updates for Sun Feb 13 23:21:03 EST 2011 From: www-data X-Original-Sender: www-data@oh-www1.lojban.org X-Original-Authentication-Results: gmr-mx.google.com; spf=pass (google.com: best guess record for domain of nobody@digitalkingdom.org designates 173.13.139.234 as permitted sender) smtp.mail=nobody@digitalkingdom.org Reply-To: bpfk-list@googlegroups.com Precedence: list Mailing-list: list bpfk-list@googlegroups.com; contact bpfk-list+owners@googlegroups.com List-ID: List-Post: , List-Help: , List-Archive: Sender: bpfk-list@googlegroups.com List-Subscribe: , List-Unsubscribe: , Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable commit d73f40862abfd12977184680524180231ec742f1 Author: Robin Lee Powell Date: Sun Feb 13 19:52:43 2011 -0800 Chapter 4 post-zort-review tweaks completed. diff --git a/todocbook/4.xml b/todocbook/4.xml index 2f10f24..9c2e7db 100644 --- a/todocbook/4.xml +++ b/todocbook/4.xml @@ -1,16 +1,16 @@ The Shape Of Words To Come: Lojban Morphology =20
Introductory - , word formsin Lojban (see also morphology) morphology<= /primary>definition morphologysimplicity of Morphology is the part of grammar that deals with the = form of words. Lojban's morphology is fairly simple compared to that of man= y languages, because Lojban words don't change form depending on how they a= re used. English has only a small number of such changes compared to langua= ges like Russian, but it does have changes like=20 + word formsin Lojban (see also morphology) morphologydef= inition morphologysimplicity of Mo= rphology is the part of grammar that deals with the form of words. Lojban's= morphology is fairly simple compared to that of many languages, because Lo= jban words don't change form depending on how they are used. English has on= ly a small number of such changes compared to languages like Russian, but i= t does have changes like=20 boys as the plural of=20 =20 boy, or=20 walked as the past-tense form of=20 walk. To make plurals or past tenses in Lojban, you add= separate words to the sentence that express the number of boys, or the tim= e when the walking was going on. word formsas related to grammatical uses derivational morphology<= secondary>definition morphologyderivational However, Lojban does have what is called=20 derivational morphology: the capability of building new= words from old words. In addition, the form of words tells us something ab= out their grammatical uses, and sometimes about the means by which they ent= ered the language. Lojban has very orderly rules for the formation of words= of various types, both the words that already exist and new words yet to b= e created by speakers and writers. =20 morphologyconventions for A stream of Lojban so= unds can be uniquely broken up into its component words according to specif= ic rules. These so-called=20 morphology rules are summarized in this chapter. (Howev= er, a detailed algorithm for breaking sounds into words has not yet been fu= lly debugged, and so is not presented in this book.) First, here are some c= onventions used to talk about groups of Lojban letters, including vowels an= d consonants. @@ -1492,39 +1492,39 @@ keit. Kate =20 namesunusual stress in cmeneunusual stress in namesstress in cmenestress in namesrules for formation cmenerules for formation= Names may have almost any form, but always end in a consonant,= and are followed by a pause. They are penultimately stressed, unless unusu= al stress is marked with capitalization. A name may have multiple parts, ea= ch ending with a consonant and pause, or the parts may be combined into a s= ingle word with no pause. For example, =20 <!-- FIXME: these two indexterms match two different examples; sho= uld they go in both or just the first? --> - <indexterm type=3D"example-imported"><primary>John Smith</primary>= <secondary>example</secondary></indexterm> - <indexterm type=3D"example-imported"><primary>Smith</primary><seco= ndary>John</secondary><tertiary>example</tertiary></indexterm> + <indexterm type=3D"example-imported"><primary>John Brown</primary>= <secondary>example</secondary></indexterm> + <indexterm type=3D"example-imported"><primary>Brown</primary><seco= ndary>John</secondary><tertiary>example</tertiary></indexterm> <anchor xml:id=3D"c4e8d9"/> - djan. smif. + djan. braun. and <anchor xml:id=3D"c4e8d10"/> - djansmif. + djanbraun. are both valid Lojbanizations of=20 - John Smith. + John Brown. =20 namesauthority for cmeneauthority for The final arbiter of the correct form of a name is the person doing= the naming, although most cultures grant people the right to determine how= they want their own name to be spelled and pronounced. The English name=20 Mary can thus be Lojbanized as=20 meris.,=20 maris.,=20 meiris.,=20 merix., or even=20 marys.. The last alter= native is not pronounced much like its English equivalent, but may be desir= able to someone who values spelling over pronunciation. The final consonant= need not be an=20 s; there must, however, be some Lojban consonant = at the end. namesrestrictions on form of cmenerestrictions on fo= rm of Names are not permitted to have the sequences= =20 @@ -1660,21 +1660,21 @@ a,=20 o, or=20 u; the term=20 front vowel correspondingly refers to any of the letter= s=20 e,=20 i, or=20 y. Change double consonants other than=20 - cc to single consonants. + cc to single consonants. Change=20 cc before a front vowel to=20 kc, but otherwise to=20 k. Change=20 c before a back vowel and final=20 @@ -2048,31 +2048,31 @@ For each rafsi, find the value in the following table. Sum= this value over all rafsi; call it=20 R:=20 CVC/CV (final) - (-sarji-) + (-sarji) 1 CVC/C (-sarj-) 2 CCVCV (final) - (-zbasu-) + (-zbasu) 3 CCVC (-zbas-) 4 CVC (-nun-) @@ -2629,105 +2629,139 @@ mekso Mathematical EXpression It is important to understand that even though=20 cmavo,=20 lojbo, and=20 lujvo were made up from parts of other gismu, they are = now full-fledged gismu used in exactly the same way as all other gismu, bot= h in grammar and in word formation. The following three groups of gismu represent concepts drawn fro= m the international language of science and mathematics. They are used for = concepts that are represented in most languages by a root which is recogniz= ed internationally. Small metric prefixes (values less than 1): - - - decti - .1/deci - - - centi - .01/centi - - - milti - .001/milli - - - mikri - 10-6/micro - - - nanvi - 10-9/nano - - - picti - 10-12/pico - - - femti - 10-15/femto - - - xatsi - 10-18/atto - - - zepti - 10-21/zepto - - - gocti - 10-24/yocto - - + + + + + + + + decti + .1 + deci + + + centi + .01 + centi + + + milti + .001 + milli + + + mikri + 10-6 + micro + + + nanvi + 10-9 + nano + + + picti + 10-12 + pico + + + femti + 10-15 + femto + + + xatsi + 10-18 + atto + + + zepti + 10-21 + zepto + + + gocti + 10-24 + yocto + + + + Large metric prefixes (values greater than 1): - - - dekto - 10/deka - - - xecto - 100/hecto - - - kilto - 1000/kilo - - - megdo - 106/mega - - - gigdo - 109/giga - - - terto - 1012/tera - - - petso - 1015/peta - - - xexso - 1018/exa - - - zetro - 1021/zetta - - - gotro - 1024/yotta - - + + + + + + + + dekto + 10 + deka + + + xecto + 100 + hecto + + + kilto + 1000 + kilo + + + megdo + 106= + mega + + + gigdo + 109= + giga + + + terto + 1012 + tera + + + petso + 1015 + peta + + + xexso + 1018 + exa + + + zetro + 1021 + zetta + + + gotro + 1024 + yotta + + + + gismucultural Other scientific or mathematical = terms: delno candela kelvo kelvin diff --git a/todocbook/TODO b/todocbook/TODO index 76fecb6..90e3280 100644 --- a/todocbook/TODO +++ b/todocbook/TODO @@ -8,36 +8,20 @@ WRT rafsi: man seems best Will that suck for ger-zda ? =20 Let alone logj-bang-girz =20 Handling chapter 2: why don't we just require that the number of sub-entri= es matches? Also: maybe rename jbo/gloss for this purpose, or introduce roles. =20 -4.xml: - - cc needs a role - - First para starts with , = for no apparent reason? - - (-sarji-)=20 - (-zbasu-) - -- extraneous trailing - - - Turn the metric prefix lists into 3 column tables; split on the / - - ). -- FIXME - - djan. smif. -- smif? *Really*? - 5.xml: Preem Palverexample is in the wrong place =20 Karaitpic should be Karaitic =20 Skt =3D emperor ... a number of others; search on ' =3D ' Qab =3D group of people -- should split into fourth column on the =3D, like others? Or not, but should be consistent. --=20 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "= BPFK" group. To post to this group, send email to bpfk-list@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to bpfk-list+unsubscribe@googleg= roups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/bpfk-l= ist?hl=3Den.