From jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Sat Mar 6 22:45:17 2010 Date: Mon, 29 May 1995 21:30:27 EDT From: jorge@PHYAST.PITT.EDU Subject: Re: quantifiers on sumti - late response To: Bob LeChevalier X-From-Space-Date: X-From-Space-Address: LOJBAN%CUVMB.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu Message-ID: la dilyn cusku di'e > I was going to suggest that I put in an inner quantifier {su'o} to > explicitly say that I'm not talking about _all_ the men I have in > mind, but I checked and the inner quantifier of {lei} is already > {su'o}. Doesn't this mean that {lei gunka} can be some piece of the > workers I have in mind? Maybe it would make more sense for the inner > quantifier of {gunka} to be {ro}. The inner and outer quantifiers have very different functions. You are taking the inner quantifier as if it was selecting from some total, but it is not. The inner quantifier is the total. If the inner quantifier is {su'o}, that only says that the total is at least one. lei su'o gunka The whole mass of all the workers (at least one) that I have in mind. The inner quantifier does not select from the number of workers you have in mind. It is that number. Jorge