From pycyn@aol.com Fri Aug 25 15:01:05 2000 Return-Path: Received: (qmail 24138 invoked from network); 25 Aug 2000 22:01:05 -0000 Received: from unknown (10.1.10.26) by m1.onelist.org with QMQP; 25 Aug 2000 22:01:05 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO imo-r10.mx.aol.com) (152.163.225.10) by mta1 with SMTP; 25 Aug 2000 22:01:05 -0000 Received: from Pycyn@aol.com by imo-r10.mx.aol.com (mail_out_v28.15.) id a.9c.6d8d505 (2619) for ; Fri, 25 Aug 2000 18:00:50 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <9c.6d8d505.26d84691@aol.com> Date: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 18:00:49 EDT Subject: Re: [lojban] lujvo & tanru To: lojban@egroups.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 3.0 16-bit for Windows sub 41 From: pycyn@aol.com X-Yahoo-Message-Num: 4059 I think developing different habits is a good idea, since we don't know what the language is to become when it becomes a langauge. On the other hand, tanru are inherently vague and have all those hard-to-access sumti places floating around, but never just the one you want. Lujvo contrariwise mean just what you want them to mean (even a regular rates) and have just the places you want -- and are equally unintelligible to your communication partners. They also take less time to say and write -- but more time to construct. Let the hundred (or was it thousand) flowers flourish!