Return-Path: Received: from SEGATE.SUNET.SE by xiron.pc.helsinki.fi with smtp (Linux Smail3.1.28.1 #1) id m0tCrvj-0000ZTC; Tue, 7 Nov 95 19:35 EET Message-Id: Received: from listmail.sunet.se by SEGATE.SUNET.SE (LSMTP for OpenVMS v1.0a) with SMTP id 452C3DE3 ; Tue, 7 Nov 1995 18:35:26 +0100 Date: Tue, 7 Nov 1995 01:12:13 -0700 Reply-To: Chris Bogart Sender: Lojban list From: Chris Bogart Subject: Re: Good Clarifying Question To: lojban@cuvmb.bitnet Content-Length: 2599 Lines: 56 cusku fa la kris. di'e: >> Could you actually give an example of an ambiguous sentence created >> in this way? If there were a lujvo "mo'irda'a" we'd know that both parts >> were rafsi because of the "r". Is there some case I'm missing? .i spuda fa la mark,l. di'e: >This is a very good question for clarifying the issues involved. Thanks >for asking. > >Homophone affix ambiguity -- the fact that hundreds of short rafsi are >identical to cmavo with unrelated meanings -- does not lead to the >creation of ambiguous sentences. The ambiguity does not "reach" to the >sentence "level." You can always disambiguate before the sentence is >finished. Aaah, now I get it. I found the term "Homophone affix ambiguity" confusing, but I get what you're talking about now. >You're listening to a Lojban utterance (or reading a Lojban text). Along >the stream of speech (or string of text) comes a form (such as CVV or >CV'V) that you recognize immediately as being meaningful in Lojban. Yet >you cannot know its meaning as quickly, if it's one of the 295 such forms >with two unrelated meanings; you must hesitate between the two possible >meanings. [I've cut out the rest of the description of this process for brevity...] There are three ways of disambiguating these cases: morphologically (with the problems you've outlined), syntactically (won't always work), and semantically (problematic for new learners and would-be-AI programs) Lojban utterances are *theoretically* disambiguable, so it doesn't matter from a theoretical standpoint that the affixes match some cmavo. >From a *practical* standpoint, lojban has vastly less ambiguity than any natlang. >From a *learning* standpoint, the rafsi-cmavo overlap seems trivial compared to a) homophony in other languages, and b) other hard-to-learn things about lojban. I've been thinking about when to use abstractors outside of "le..ku", how to use event contours, getting comfortable with the tense system, the scope of quantifiers... Learning two meanings for "da'a" is a walk in the park! :-) In short, I think you're right, but you overestimate its importance by underestimating other competing difficulties. BUT... A more thorough change that eliminated the distinction between rafsi and gismu, or made one absolutely predictable from the other, would be more defendable, because that really is a serious learning hurdle IMO. But then we're talking about a whole new language, really. ____ Chris Bogart \ / ftp://ftp.csn.net/cbogart/html/homepage.html Boulder, CO \/ cbogart@quetzal.com