From jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Sat Mar 6 22:56:04 2010 Date: Fri, 28 Apr 1995 14:55:35 EDT From: jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Subject: Re: responses to Jorge To: Bob LeChevalier X-From-Space-Date: Sat Apr 29 00:13:46 1995 X-From-Space-Address: LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu Message-ID: la lojbab cusku di'e > > mi prami la maris du'ibo la djan > > I love Mary and equally John. > > Unless I am missing something, if you say ".edu'ibo", the current language > allows this. Yes, but why should you be forced to use logical connectives? Besides, combinations with other than {.e} usually make very little sense. I don't like mixing logical connectives where they are not relevant. I am not saying that the proposed extension allows to say anything new. The forethought form already exists, and since the afterthought can be added at no cost, why not do it? It only makes the overall picture more complete. > > mi fa'u do dei ciska gifa'u tcidu > > I respectively you write respectively read this. > > Likewise, only you do not need the gi. Without the {gi} it is a tanru connector, sometimes it may make a difference. Again, the forethought form exists, and the afterthought form can be made available. Why not allow it? > I checked both of these alternatives with the parser and they work. Is > there a semantics question involved that makes the versions I suggest > improper? Not improper, just slightly different. It's like asking why should there be bridi tail connectors at all if we already have tanru connectors. > (Actually, the semantics of fa'u are fairly undefined, but I > would have interpreted my version of the sentence per your translation. Why are they undefined? They seem pretty clear to me. What is the problem with it? > > la djan zmadu la maris le ka ke'a dunda > > John is more than Mary in property "____ gives something to someone". > > > > la djan zmadu la maris le ka dunda fi ke'a > > John is more than Mary in property "Someone gives something to ____". > > > >Since my proposal doesn't really require to change anything, I intend to > >use it in the rare occasions when it would be needed, and risk being > >misunderstood by those who don't approve. (Currently, {ke'a} is > >meaningless in those sentences.) > > Unless the sentence occurs in a relative clause. Yes, that's why I said "in those sentences". The need for them is very rare, and when or if ever they occur in relative clauses, subscripts can be used. (I never intend to use subscripts, though. If the sentence seems to require them, better rework the sentence to something less convoluted.) > Cowan had an alternate way of doing what he labelled as "lambda > variables" that didn't have this problem, and which I thought we had > agreed upon last LogFest, but I won't pretend to remember which proposal > came where without a long look at my notes. All that was agreed (as far as I understood) was that some "lambda variable" would be added. There was no talk about its specific form. In one of the papers, {dakau} is proposed for this function, but in my opinion, this doesn't work because it conflicts with the indirect question meaning. (This can't be solved with subscripts.) For example (still using ke'a for the "lambda"): la djan zmadu la maris le ka ke'a dunda makau John exceeds Mary in what they give. la djan zmadu la maris le ka dunda makau ke'a John exceeds Mary in what they are given. As well as other types of indirect questions: la djan zmadu la maris le ka ke'a dunda xokau da John exceeds Mary in how many things they give. etcetera. > I'd have to dig, but am pretty sure that there is some usage of va and > vu as tags, possibly even some dating from the JCB versions of the > language (at least in spirit if not in actual form). In the texts I have, negligible use, maybe two or three times, one of them by me in a translation... :( > What may not have > been used significantly is "vazi" or "vuzi". What would they mean? "zi" is a time magnitude. I think this shows partly where the confusion comes from. In pre-historic times, ZI were supposed to be magnitudes both for time PUs and for space VAs. PUs and VAs were somehow corresponding time and space tenses. This is not how things are now. The space counterparts of PUs are FAhAs. They show direction. The space counterparts of ZIs are VAs, they show magnitude of displacement. In actual use, {vi} is taken as the counterpart of {ca}, where the more "correct" would be {bu'u}. I am not going to fight against this use of {vi}, which seems pretty much entrenched, but it should be recognized as somehow not conforming to specifications. > I don't see FAhAs as having much to do with VAs - they aren't > grammatically or semantically related to me. The VAs give the magnitude of the displacement, the FAhAs give the direction. The relationship between FAhA and VA is the same as between PU and ZI, both grammatically and semantically. > I would probably interpret > "zi" as a tcita to mean elliptically puzi or bazi based on context and > the tagged sumti, since that is what I use the bare "zi" as a tense to > mean. That's the canonical interpretation, yes. My contention is that there is a much more useful possible meaning for the tagged sumti, namely the actual magnitude. For example: mi ba xruti zi lei mu mentu I'll be back in five minutes. > Perhaps with an obviously locational sumti, I might interpret it > as ellipsis for vizi+FAhA i.e. a short distance away in some particular > unstated direction from the point. {zi} can't be used with space tenses, if I understand correctly. Jorge