1. Just say it.
2. Call it an onomatopoeia
4. Some other option?
Again, I really appreciate all your help.
On Sunday, September 9, 2012 3:27:09 AM UTC-6, tijlan wrote:
"Woof!" isn't always a noise. Many non-human expressions are still
cognitive products and represent something in a non-random way. They
can have meanings and are different from non-cognitive sounds such as
"Splash!".
"Woof!" may not have a layered syntax or an argument structure, which
is analogous to Lojban's observatives (selbri-only expressions). An
observative with an avalent (zero-argument) brivla could work much as
"Woof!", in my opinion.
If we were to create a brivla for each animal exression, probably we
would have to tap into the expandability of fu'ivla, much like we did
for certain ISO codes:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ai4mbIPr2PUwdENVckVaOTJLbVdGVE5SeGJ0MTBTbGc
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ai4mbIPr2PUwdGNYUFhrdmV1cmpLeVVQZkNSU3dBYUE
We could have a similar list of expressional sounds using some kind of
indicative prefixes. For example:
cmo,ufu / gerku,uu (Woof!)
cmonkua / datkakua (Quack!)
cmomiau / mlatumiau (Meow!)
molxisi / sincexisi (Hiss!)
zbi,onki / xarju,onki (Oink!)
These would all be zero-argument and compatible with {lu ... li'u}.
mu'o