From cowan Sat Mar 6 22:53:12 2010 Subject: Re: TECH QUERY: variant fu'ivla To: lojban@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu (Lojban List) From: cowan Date: Wed, 17 Jan 1996 10:38:49 -0500 (EST) In-Reply-To: <199601171115.GAA27789@locke.ccil.org> from "Ivan A Derzhanski" at Jan 17, 96 11:31:20 am X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL24] Content-Type: text Status: OR X-Mozilla-Status: 0011 Content-Length: 1299 X-From-Space-Date: Wed Jan 17 10:38:49 1996 X-From-Space-Address: cowan Message-ID: la .iVAN. cusku di'e > Not {-akere}? There is no {c}-sound in Latin, and we shouldn't make > too much of the (necessarily arbitrary) choice of Roman letters to > represent the sounds of Lojban. (Meaning that I would like to think > that Lojban would sound the same if it had a wholly different spelling > or even a different alphabet from the outset.) Linnaean borrowings follow a different rule (this was laid down in JCB's time): c > k before back vowels, but is unchanged before front vowels. It is the Linnaean name >Acer< that controls here, not the homographic Latin word. > While we're at the subject of fu'ivla and their shapes, what about > fu'ivla starting in {CCV'V-}, where {CCV} is a classifying rafsi and > the original word starts in a vowel (or a vowel preceded by a consonant > that we choose to ignore), say, {cpi'alauda} for `lark' (Alauda), > {cpi'irondo} for `swallow' (Hirondo)? As far as I can see, such > words don't run the risk of being parsed as something else. Comments? Those two examples work because they end in -VVCV and -VCCV; those endings and -CVCV make for safe fu'ivla. But the trick won't work in general: "cpi'alaudai" fails the slinku'i test: "pa cpi'alaudai" = 'pac-pi'a-lau-dai'. -- John Cowan cowan@ccil.org e'osai ko sarji la lojban.