Received: from mail-vc0-f191.google.com ([209.85.220.191]:50785) by stodi.digitalkingdom.org with esmtps (TLSv1:RC4-SHA:128) (Exim 4.76) (envelope-from ) id 1Tv2gR-0005yw-ED; Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:20:06 -0800 Received: by mail-vc0-f191.google.com with SMTP id fo13sf3097675vcb.8 for ; Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:19:45 -0800 (PST) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=googlegroups.com; s=20120806; h=x-received:x-beenthere:x-received:date:from:to:message-id :in-reply-to:references:subject:mime-version:x-original-sender :reply-to:precedence:mailing-list:list-id:x-google-group-id :list-post:list-help:list-archive:sender:list-subscribe :list-unsubscribe:content-type; bh=PbAL3BaS7qUi37saYSgoobmVxvGu0Q2rPYxtOS39vU4=; b=eQ3YUhbhZf92ZnxJaNpStmlkH2RX0DO6I0W5aMD3GKpAwxBZ4g47stFPmJsekGSBK9 //fS7H7kzpeTtAmZlaJI8jULQ4wqm/I4CHEKmiBeS4yi6Cfri9f5ZIQCTgaCxFZkvddE LtTd+4TT0GltDDF2CmnAIMUu4qz2ao4EaZjc1cN1gycu+AuqFw56HyMb801tw8Jdebob 53yixvxMSTUbpSLT8mKiTOlLHB69eYE+3o0rd4S2n9o9CEaWkcrIpreBtcSn/Uewir7o i3SeypfWX0COvWfVf9vsahiVbyCCzy5mXJfLBBgfM5lCZNXjPfx2U+hkigw6naM284HQ xH0w== DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=20120113; h=x-received:x-beenthere:x-received:date:from:to:message-id :in-reply-to:references:subject:mime-version:x-original-sender :reply-to:precedence:mailing-list:list-id:x-google-group-id :list-post:list-help:list-archive:sender:list-subscribe :list-unsubscribe:content-type; bh=PbAL3BaS7qUi37saYSgoobmVxvGu0Q2rPYxtOS39vU4=; b=yjgaxAnai9gncgsQAk7kpgEKMamMyFNVwd4sumy11hT7+rRv/b44/RtcXaYLWC7u9j q7leuz9ZkNRE0Rf9iuHPRu1psJBHhaTOCZ20tiKk29DSvqCwjuXwfEtn+SvuQrtkpTZ5 mqTHt4LNCw2pC/NlAk47tcbov4v3OqQpulUV0FWktymoqa+7lPerCqM+pVIJ4rhuAwmr 1mzJ3cB/Omq5ZrvYcJAjQMqWqu7xM8I7u44Gt741OAh2rbg1JGHi9OaIjLDicOaXxGt8 8hefS1xyv5A9eJyo0eChnG3ectImw0ix4rPbhhAtNR7HqYkYespp2N0djxSXmQACdgFg lBcQ== X-Received: by 10.49.1.43 with SMTP id 11mr16061232qej.29.1358241584847; Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:19:44 -0800 (PST) X-BeenThere: lojban@googlegroups.com Received: by 10.49.98.170 with SMTP id ej10ls15579qeb.45.gmail; Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:19:44 -0800 (PST) X-Received: by 10.49.24.13 with SMTP id q13mr16050411qef.33.1358241584327; Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:19:44 -0800 (PST) Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2013 01:19:43 -0800 (PST) From: la gleki To: lojban@googlegroups.com Message-Id: In-Reply-To: References: <50F2D56C.8040405@lojban.org> <1704f503-32c7-48cf-9b68-4c438948385d@googlegroups.com> <1358202481.2304.7.camel@thomas> <862aa0fb-4a06-4724-93f5-a8349e301902@googlegroups.com> Subject: Re: [lojban] What is the source of gismu *definitions*? MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Original-Sender: gleki.is.my.name@gmail.com Reply-To: lojban@googlegroups.com Precedence: list Mailing-list: list lojban@googlegroups.com; contact lojban+owners@googlegroups.com List-ID: X-Google-Group-Id: 1004133512417 List-Post: , List-Help: , List-Archive: Sender: lojban@googlegroups.com List-Subscribe: , List-Unsubscribe: , Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_Part_72_11533651.1358241583635" X-Spam-Score: -0.1 (/) X-Spam_score: -0.1 X-Spam_score_int: 0 X-Spam_bar: / ------=_Part_72_11533651.1358241583635 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:41:18 PM UTC+4, aionys wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 12:27 AM, la gleki > > wrote: > >> On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 10:17:17 AM UTC+4, aionys wrote: >> >>> On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 9:19 PM, la gleki wrote= : >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:28:01 AM UTC+4, Bob Slaughter wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Mon, 2013-01-14 at 06:50 -0800, la gleki wrote: >>>>> >>>>> doi lojbab mi ckire do .io lo ka ciksi so'a da=20 >>>>> >>>>> =20 >>>>> >>>>> As usual this topic is turning into a rant. But that was predictable= =20 >>>>> and unavoidable.=20 >>>>> >>>>> Reading lojbab's email, I find it a detailed and informative look at= =20 >>>>> how the gismu list was started and the initial gismu were formed, inc= luding=20 >>>>> warts. If you consider this a "rant", >>>>> >>>> >>>> I consider the following messages as "rant". >>>> >>>> then it appears there really isn't much need for me to read any more= =20 >>>>> emails from you. I would be willing to consider otherwise, if you can= =20 >>>>> demonstrate useful work you have contributed. The "lojban berries" is= =20 >>>>> almost the most useless thing I can think of -- *of course* "ckule" l= ooks=20 >>>>> and sounds like "school" -- it was derived from "school / schule" and= the=20 >>>>> other words from the target languages for *maximum phonetic recogniti= on*.=20 >>>>> >>>> >>>> This is only one tab of Lojban berries. Look at the other tabs.=20 >>>> >>> >>> Two things: >>> >>> 1) Rants are typically lengthy paragraphs about a particular subject fo= r=20 >>> which the author has strong feelings for, not two sentences about an=20 >>> observation which is accurate and calmly delivered.=20 >>> >>> 2) I've looked at all the tabs, and I share his viewpoint on the=20 >>> uselessness of it. When you wonder why nobody helps you in your endeavo= rs,=20 >>> think back on what he said. >>> >> >> It's just a continuation of Lojban Functional List. >> If no one wants to fill gaps in lojbanic lexicon, even in computer=20 >> terminology, well then no fluent speakers will appear soon. Otherwise ho= w=20 >> can we discuss anything on the internet? >> > > A languages lexicon has little to nothing to do with a person's fluency,= =20 > and we /currently/ have fluent speakers (granted not many, but that's=20 > neither here nor there). As far as my assessment of your lists as useless= :=20 > there are two places where jbopre look when they want to know the Lojban= =20 > word: vlasisku and jbovlaste. If it doesn't exist there, they either make= =20 > one up, ask jbocertu to make one up for them, or use a different word tha= t=20 > does exist.=20 > OK. I'm asking once again. Here is the list of computer terms. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=3D0Ahngu1CNj7wddDZBRzgwMm1EWlpK= UEJRcTQtUGNCMFE#gid=3D4 I need all of them translated to stop talking in English.=20 Please, help. On Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:40:28 PM UTC+4, lojbab wrote: >>>>> >>>>> la gleki wrote:=20 >>>>> > Every Lojbanist understands that gismu denote predicates that are= =20 >>>>> highly=20 >>>>> > practical.=20 >>>>> > e.g. {pilno} includes a goal as pilno3. Indeed, how can we imagine= =20 >>>>> using=20 >>>>> > something without a goal?=20 >>>>> >=20 >>>>> > My question is who collected those definitions?=20 >>>>> >>>>> Me.=20 >>>>> >>>>> > Was it JCB?=20 >>>>> >>>>> > How was this gimste formed?=20 >>>>> >>>>> JCB set the place structures for the TLI Loglan words. His general= =20 >>>>> philosophy of doing so was set forth in his books Loglan 1 and Loglan= =20 >>>>> 2,=20 >>>>> though he didn't always follow his own principles.=20 >>>>> >>>>> I started with JCB's list, but greatly modified it, both adding and= =20 >>>>> deleting words. As such, there are half-again as many gismu as there= =20 >>>>> were in TLI Loglan of the time. In very few cases can I tell you for= =20 >>>>> certain the specific reason I added certain words, though for the=20 >>>>> culture words I made an attempt to be systematic. A large chunk was= =20 >>>>> added in 1988 as a result of Athelstan doing a thorough analysis base= d=20 >>>>> on Roget's thesaurus, to make sure that we had good coverage of all= =20 >>>>> semantic domains.=20 >>>>> >>>>> During the period from about 1990-1994, I subjected all change=20 >>>>> proposals=20 >>>>> to the LogFest attendees, representing the community, for approval.= =20 >>>>> In=20 >>>>> the latter two years, a faction emerged favoring the elimination of= =20 >>>>> some=20 >>>>> gismu and thus keeping the total number constant, in the face of new= =20 >>>>> proposals, if not shrinking. One last group of new ones was approved= ,=20 >>>>> and the list was frozen. Many years passed before any word was=20 >>>>> proposed=20 >>>>> with significant justification, thus suggesting that this decision wa= s=20 >>>>> correct. (If no one has really needed a word in 25 odd years of use,= =20 >>>>> it=20 >>>>> is hard to argue that it is fundamental, even if it might be useful.)= =20 >>>>> >>>>> Place structures started with JCB's general pattern. I attempted to= =20 >>>>> find patterns, and then to make words of similar semantic domain=20 >>>>> consistent. Thus all plant and animal gismu were to have a species= =20 >>>>> place. I eventually got things fairly systematic, though I made some= =20 >>>>> mistakes. At that point, pretty much no one besides me was looking= =20 >>>>> that=20 >>>>> closely.=20 >>>>> >>>>> I strongly avoided one-place predicates.=20 >>>>> >>>>> But at one point, I realized I was going too far, ascribing to any=20 >>>>> possible tool a purpose, and to any object both material and form=20 >>>>> places. I backed off from this somewhat. I thus avoided >5 place=20 >>>>> predicates. At about this point, the current concept of BAI started= =20 >>>>> to=20 >>>>> emerge, and it was realized that a large number of places were=20 >>>>> superfluous. I made one last pass, generally reducing many of the=20 >>>>> excess places I had added.=20 >>>>> >>>>> Is there a changelog of modifications to gismu=20 >>>>> > definitions starting from the first edition of loglan?=20 >>>>> >>>>> Not hardly. I introduced the concept of configuration management in= =20 >>>>> the=20 >>>>> 1988-1994 period, starting to document all changes once a chunk of th= e=20 >>>>> language was baselined. Before it was baselined, documentation was= =20 >>>>> rarely attempted, though there are some cases. In only a few cases d= o=20 >>>>> we even have good copies of the evolving word lists - this was still = a=20 >>>>> primarily paper and pencil project.=20 >>>>> >>>>> > My particular interest here is with the recent discussion of a=20 >>>>> possible=20 >>>>> > new gismu meaning "qua". The corresponding word is of high frequenc= y=20 >>>>> in=20 >>>>> > Mandarin but in European languages it is often confused with words= =20 >>>>> > meaning {simsa}.=20 >>>>> > e.g.=20 >>>>> > "as" means both "like" and "qua".=20 >>>>> > Russian "=D0=BA=D0=B0=D0=BA" [kak] means both "like" and "qua".=20 >>>>> >>>>> I have no comment on the merits of this, other than to merely observe= =20 >>>>> that many of the world's languages seem to do fine without making a= =20 >>>>> distinction.=20 >>>>> >>>>> The gismu list is baselined. New gismu are not being considered, and= =20 >>>>> there is no plan to do so in the future, though this could be=20 >>>>> revisited=20 >>>>> AFTER the existing language is fully documented.=20 >>>>> >>>>> > Were Mandarin predicates taken into consideration while constructin= g=20 >>>>> > gismu definitions?=20 >>>>> >>>>> Not that I know of. I did the Mandarin work for Lojban, and I don't= =20 >>>>> know Mandarin.=20 >>>>> >>>>> More importantly, almost no consideration of semantics was involved i= n=20 >>>>> gismu-making. If the basic meaning was generally covered, that was= =20 >>>>> good=20 >>>>> enough. It was expected that the meanings and place structures would= =20 >>>>> evolve with usage. (But by 1997, the community was tired of my and= =20 >>>>> other senior Lojbanists changing the language by fiat. The community= =20 >>>>> wanted the language to stop changing in that matter. Completely. I= =20 >>>>> agreed with them. We don't change the language by fiat anymore. The= =20 >>>>> only exception, adopted for byfy use, is that stuff which is so broke= n=20 >>>>> as to prevent good documentation of the status quo language, could be= =20 >>>>> changed so as to allow that documentation. (Since then, sentiment=20 >>>>> seems=20 >>>>> to have grown against "usage-based change" which is the other=20 >>>>> alternative, and one that cannot really be prevented. People=20 >>>>> generally=20 >>>>> are biased against change in language. They want books that are=20 >>>>> prescriptive and unchanging, whereas lexicographers strongly consider= =20 >>>>> dictionaries by nature to be descriptive rather than prescriptive.)= =20 >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I did use some systematic techniques to try to be sure I was picking= =20 >>>>> the=20 >>>>> correct root, and for a brief time, we had a native Mandarin speaker= =20 >>>>> who=20 >>>>> looked over what I had done with approval. (A couple of Mandarin=20 >>>>> speakers since then have also said that the work I did was more than= =20 >>>>> adequate, but they were generally comparing us to Esperanto and other= =20 >>>>> Euroclone languages). I also used 3 different dictionaries in the cas= e=20 >>>>> of Mandarin in order to be more certain, since Mandarin has such a=20 >>>>> high=20 >>>>> weight in Lojban word-making. Still, there are flaws, and I think my= =20 >>>>> choice for Lojbanization of Mandarin was especially bad, being based= =20 >>>>> solely on the quasi-official Chinese description of the IPA=20 >>>>> pronunciation of Chinese particles, and the system I used for mapping= =20 >>>>> IPA in other languages. As a result, Mandarin inputs had too many=20 >>>>> "a"s=20 >>>>> representing schwa, and too many fricatives were mapped to s and c,= =20 >>>>> leading to Lojban having a "she sells sea shells" quality that is har= d=20 >>>>> for some speakers, including me, to speak the language quickly and=20 >>>>> accurately.=20 >>>>> >>>>> But I don't know enough Mandarin grammar to have any clue what=20 >>>>> subjects=20 >>>>> and objects any given Mandarin word might require (if any) I did=20 >>>>> enough=20 >>>>> comparative linguistics study to be reasonably confident that my=20 >>>>> approach was "good enough".=20 >>>>> >>>>> (Arabic is the other language where my word-making rules were=20 >>>>> systematic=20 >>>>> but led to a relatively poor result. And since Arabic has the lowest= =20 >>>>> weight of the 6 source languages, this meant that Arabic influenced= =20 >>>>> relative few words, and its inputs were less useful to Arabic speakin= g=20 >>>>> Lojbanists.=20 >>>>> >>>>> JCB may have had some native speaker inputs in the early days, but my= =20 >>>>> general observations on his choices for word-making suggest that they= =20 >>>>> were even more limited and flawed than my efforts. I know that we ha= d=20 >>>>> much better dictionaries by 1987 than JCB had in 1955.=20 >>>>> >>>>> lojbab=20 >>>>> --=20 >>>>> Bob LeChevalier loj...@lojban.org www.lojban.org=20 >>>>> President and Founder, The Logical Language Group, Inc.=20 >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> =20 >>>>> --=20 >>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google=20 >>>>> Groups "lojban" group. >>>>> To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/= * >>>>> *ms**g/lojban/-/nz86kpRVGjUJ >>>>> . >>>>> To post to this group, send email to loj...@googlegroups.com. >>>>> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to lojban+un...@** >>>>> googlegroups.com. >>>>> >>>>> For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/**grou= p >>>>> **/lojban?hl=3Den . >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> --=20 >>>>> Bob Slaughter, rslau...@WHATmindspring.com >>>>> http://www.facebook.com/**robert**.s.slaughter =20 >>>>> "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be >>>>> ruled by evil men." -- Plato >>>>> "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do >>>>> nothing." -- Edmund Burke >>>>> "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, bu= t >>>>> because of those who look on and do nothing." -- Albert Einstein >>>>> >>>>> --=20 >>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google=20 >>>> Groups "lojban" group. >>>> To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/*= * >>>> msg/lojban/-/XjZ68ZouJf4J >>>> . >>>> >>>> To post to this group, send email to loj...@googlegroups.com. >>>> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to lojban+un...@** >>>> googlegroups.com. >>>> For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/** >>>> group/lojban?hl=3Den . >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> --=20 >>> mu'o mi'e .aionys. >>> >>> .i.e'ucai ko cmima lo pilno be denpa bu .i doi.luk. mi patfu do zo'o >>> (Come to the Dot Side! Luke, I am your father. :D ) >>> >> --=20 >> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Group= s=20 >> "lojban" group. >> To view this discussion on the web visit=20 >> https://groups.google.com/d/msg/lojban/-/cYAnnv-erOkJ. >> >> To post to this group, send email to loj...@googlegroups.com >> . >> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to=20 >> lojban+un...@googlegroups.com . >> For more options, visit this group at=20 >> http://groups.google.com/group/lojban?hl=3Den. >> > > > > --=20 > mu'o mi'e .aionys. > > .i.e'ucai ko cmima lo pilno be denpa bu .i doi.luk. mi patfu do zo'o > (Come to the Dot Side! Luke, I am your father. :D ) > --=20 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "= lojban" group. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msg/lo= jban/-/2JLsL3MmUIIJ. To post to this group, send email to lojban@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to lojban+unsubscribe@googlegrou= ps.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/lojban= ?hl=3Den. ------=_Part_72_11533651.1358241583635 Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:41:18 PM UTC+4, aionys wrote:
On Tue, J= an 15, 2013 at 12:27 AM, la gleki <gleki.is...@g= mail.com> wrote:
On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 10:17:17 AM UTC+4, aionys wrote:
On Mon, Jan 14, 2= 013 at 9:19 PM, la gleki <gleki.is...@gmail.com= > wrote:


On Tuesday, January 15, 2013 2:28:01 AM UTC+4, Bob Slaughter w= rote:
=20 =20
On Mon, 2013-01-14 at 06:50 -0800, la gleki wrote:
doi lojbab mi ckire do .io lo ka ciksi so'a da


As usual this topic is turning into a rant. But that was predictable an= d unavoidable.
Reading lojbab's email, I find it a detailed and informative look at how th= e gismu list was started and the initial gismu were formed, including warts= . If you consider this a "rant",

I consider the following messages as "rant".

then it appears there really isn't much need for me to read any more = emails from you. I would be willing to consider otherwise, if you can demon= strate useful work you have contributed. The "lojban berries" is almost the= most useless thing I can think of -- *of course* "ckule" looks and sounds = like "school" -- it was derived from "school / schule" and the other words = from the target languages for *maximum phonetic recognition*.

This is only one tab of Lojban= berries. Look at the other tabs. 

Two thin= gs:

1) Rants are typically lengthy paragraphs about a particular sub= ject for which the author has strong feelings for, not two sentences about = an observation which is accurate and calmly delivered.

2) I've looked at all the tabs, and I share his viewpoint on the useles= sness of it. When you wonder why nobody helps you in your endeavors, think = back on what he said.

It's just  a continuation of Lojban Functional List.
If= no one wants to fill gaps in lojbanic lexicon, even in computer terminolog= y, well then no fluent speakers will appear soon. Otherwise how can we disc= uss anything on the internet?

A languages lexicon has little to nothing to do with = a person's fluency, and we /currently/ have fluent speakers (granted not ma= ny, but that's neither here nor there). As far as my assessment of your lis= ts as useless: there are two places where jbopre look when they want to kno= w the Lojban word: vlasisku and jbovlaste. If it doesn't exist there, they = either make one up, ask jbocertu to make one up for them, or use a differen= t word that does exist.

OK= . I'm asking once again. Here is the list of computer terms.
http= s://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=3D0Ahngu1CNj7wddDZBRzgwMm1EWlpKUEJR= cTQtUGNCMFE#gid=3D4

I need all of them translated = to stop talking in English. 
Please, help.

=
On Sunday, January 13, 2013 7:40:28 PM UTC+4, lojbab wrote:
la gleki wrote:
> Every Lojbanist understands that gismu denote predicates that = are highly
> practical.
> e.g. {pilno} includes a goal as pilno3. Indeed, how can we ima= gine using
> something without a goal?
>
> My question is who collected those definitions?

Me.

> Was it JCB?

 > How was this gimste formed?

JCB set the place structures for the TLI Loglan words.  His ge= neral
philosophy of doing so was set forth in his books Loglan 1 and Logl= an 2,
though he didn't always follow his own principles.

I started with JCB's list, but greatly modified it, both adding and=
deleting words.  As such, there are half-again as many gismu a= s there
were in TLI Loglan of the time.  In very few cases can I tell = you for
certain the specific reason I added certain words, though for the <= br> culture words I made an attempt to be systematic.  A large chu= nk was
added in 1988 as a result of Athelstan doing a thorough analysis ba= sed
on Roget's thesaurus, to make sure that we had good coverage of all=
semantic domains.

During the period from about 1990-1994, I subjected all change prop= osals
to the LogFest attendees, representing the community, for approval.=  In
the latter two years, a faction emerged favoring the elimination of= some
gismu and thus keeping the total number constant, in the face of ne= w
proposals, if not shrinking.  One last group of new ones was a= pproved,
and the list was frozen.  Many years passed before any word wa= s proposed
with significant justification, thus suggesting that this decision = was
correct.  (If no one has really needed a word in 25 odd years = of use, it
is hard to argue that it is fundamental, even if it might be useful= .)

Place structures started with JCB's general pattern.  I attemp= ted to
find patterns, and then to make words of similar semantic domain consistent.  Thus all plant and animal gismu were to have a sp= ecies
place.  I eventually got things fairly systematic, though I ma= de some
mistakes.  At that point, pretty much no one besides me was lo= oking that
closely.

I strongly avoided one-place predicates.

But at one point, I realized I was going too far, ascribing to any =
possible tool a purpose, and to any object both material and form <= br> places.  I backed off from this somewhat.  I thus avoided= >5 place
predicates.  At about this point, the current concept of BAI s= tarted to
emerge, and it was realized that a large number of places were
superfluous.  I made one last pass, generally reducing many of= the
excess places I had added.

Is there a changelog of modifications to gismu
> definitions starting from the first edition of loglan?

Not hardly.  I introduced the concept of configuration managem= ent in the
1988-1994 period, starting to document all changes once a chunk of = the
language was baselined.  Before it was baselined, documentatio= n was
rarely attempted, though there are some cases.  In only a few = cases do
we even have good copies of the evolving word lists - this was stil= l a
primarily paper and pencil project.

> My particular interest here is with the recent discussion of a= possible
> new gismu meaning "qua". The corresponding word is of high fre= quency in
> Mandarin but in European languages it is often confused with w= ords
> meaning {simsa}.
> e.g.
> "as" means both "like" and "qua".
> Russian "=D0=BA=D0=B0=D0=BA" [kak] means both "like" and "qua"= .

I have no comment on the merits of this, other than to merely obser= ve
that many of the world's languages seem to do fine without making a=
distinction.

The gismu list is baselined.  New gismu are not being consider= ed, and
there is no plan to do so in the future, though this could be revis= ited
AFTER the existing language is fully documented.

> Were Mandarin predicates taken into consideration while constr= ucting
> gismu definitions?

Not that I know of.  I did the Mandarin work for Lojban, and I= don't
know Mandarin.

More importantly, almost no consideration of semantics was involved= in
gismu-making.  If the basic meaning was generally covered, tha= t was good
enough.  It was expected that the meanings and place structure= s would
evolve with usage.  (But by 1997, the community was tired of m= y and
other senior Lojbanists changing the language by fiat.  The co= mmunity
wanted the language to stop changing in that matter.  Complete= ly.  I
agreed with them.  We don't change the language by fiat anymor= e.  The
only exception, adopted for byfy use, is that stuff which is so bro= ken
as to prevent good documentation of the status quo language, could = be
changed so as to allow that documentation.  (Since then, senti= ment seems
to have grown against "usage-based change" which is the other
alternative, and one that cannot really be prevented.  People = generally
are biased against change in language.  They want books that a= re
prescriptive and unchanging, whereas lexicographers strongly consid= er
dictionaries by nature to be descriptive rather than prescriptive.)=



I did use some systematic techniques to try to be sure I was pickin= g the
correct root, and for a brief time, we had a native Mandarin speake= r who
looked over what I had done with approval. (A couple of Mandarin speakers since then have also said that the work I did was more tha= n
adequate, but they were generally comparing us to Esperanto and oth= er
Euroclone languages). I also used 3 different dictionaries in the c= ase
of Mandarin in order to be more certain, since Mandarin has such a = high
weight in Lojban word-making.  Still, there are flaws, and I t= hink my
choice for Lojbanization of Mandarin was especially bad, being base= d
solely on the quasi-official Chinese description of the IPA
pronunciation of Chinese particles, and the system I used for mappi= ng
IPA in other languages.  As a result, Mandarin inputs had too = many "a"s
representing schwa, and too many fricatives were mapped to s and c,=
leading to Lojban having a "she sells sea shells" quality that is h= ard
for some speakers, including me, to speak the language quickly and =
accurately.

But I don't know enough Mandarin grammar to have any clue what subj= ects
and objects any given Mandarin word might require (if any)  I = did enough
comparative linguistics study to be reasonably confident that my approach was "good enough".

(Arabic is the other language where my word-making rules were syste= matic
but led to a relatively poor result.  And since Arabic has the= lowest
weight of the 6 source languages, this meant that Arabic influenced=
relative few words, and its inputs were less useful to Arabic speak= ing
Lojbanists.

JCB may have had some native speaker inputs in the early days, but = my
general observations on his choices for word-making suggest that th= ey
were even more limited and flawed than my efforts.  I know tha= t we had
much better dictionaries by 1987 than JCB had in 1955.

lojbab
--
Bob LeChevalier    loj...@lojban.org    = www.lojban.org
President and Founder, The Logical Language Group, Inc.



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--=20
Bob Slaughter, rslau...@WHATmindspring.com
ht= tp://www.facebook.com/robert.s.slaughter  "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." -- Plato "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." -- Edmund Burke "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing." -- Albert Einstein

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--
mu'o mi'e .aionys.

.i.e'ucai ko cmima lo pilno be denpa bu .i = doi.luk. mi patfu do zo'o
(Come to the Dot Side! Luke, I am your father.= :D )

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--
mu'o mi'e .= aionys.

.i.e'ucai ko cmima lo pilno be denpa bu .i doi.luk. mi patfu= do zo'o
(Come to the Dot Side! Luke, I am your father. :D )

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