From nobody@digitalkingdom.org Wed May 23 10:36:57 2007 Received: with ECARTIS (v1.0.0; list lojban-beginners); Wed, 23 May 2007 10:36:57 -0700 (PDT) Received: from nobody by chain.digitalkingdom.org with local (Exim 4.63) (envelope-from ) id 1Hqulb-0001sD-U4 for lojban-beginners-real@lojban.org; Wed, 23 May 2007 10:36:56 -0700 Received: from elasmtp-junco.atl.sa.earthlink.net ([209.86.89.63]) by chain.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.63) (envelope-from ) id 1HqulY-0001rx-Ev for lojban-beginners@lojban.org; Wed, 23 May 2007 10:36:55 -0700 DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=dk20050327; d=mindspring.com; b=ocaRLydyDHdC/Ciqbs0dKYpIU9UCJaZvx7BAg4W+hIA+kLO9Xd8/3czaNhIfekp0; h=Received:Mime-Version:In-Reply-To:References:Content-Type:Message-Id:Content-Transfer-Encoding:From:Subject:Date:To:X-Mailer:X-ELNK-Trace:X-Originating-IP; Received: from [68.164.83.204] (helo=[10.0.1.2]) by elasmtp-junco.atl.sa.earthlink.net with asmtp (Exim 4.34) id 1HqulS-0007oE-97 for lojban-beginners@lojban.org; Wed, 23 May 2007 13:36:46 -0400 Mime-Version: 1.0 (Apple Message framework v752.3) In-Reply-To: References: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed Message-Id: Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From: Cortesi Subject: [lojban-beginners] Re: lojban-beginners Digest V6 #80 Date: Wed, 23 May 2007 10:36:44 -0700 To: lojban-beginners@lojban.org X-ELNK-Trace: c82619e33d1ea3219c7f779228e2f6aeda0071232e20db4dff8f390dcb7fc1043c413acf668e2437350badd9bab72f9c350badd9bab72f9c350badd9bab72f9c X-Originating-IP: 68.164.83.204 X-Spam-Score: 0.5 X-Spam-Score-Int: 5 X-Spam-Bar: / X-archive-position: 4617 X-ecartis-version: Ecartis v1.0.0 Sender: lojban-beginners-bounce@lojban.org Errors-to: lojban-beginners-bounce@lojban.org X-original-sender: dcortesi@mindspring.com Precedence: bulk Reply-to: lojban-beginners@lojban.org X-list: lojban-beginners On May 23, 2007, at 2:21 AM, :m.kornig@sondal.net wrote: > the word "neighbor"... > Is it "xa'ujbi" or "jbixa'u"? > Which is better/more common? Frankly I would not want to call a neighbor by either term. Two words closer to sound of a large gob being spat I've never heard...