.ue.ua.ui that's pretty cool, maybe you could record the song and I'm sure
they can put it up on Lojban radio, last I heard they were really lacking
content.
On 9/27/06, Matt Arnold <matt.mattarn@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Saturday I threw a party. Most of the people there know that I
> speak Lojban. At one point some of my friends started singing a simple
> repetitive song which could be sung in many styles. One singer invents
> a style and everyone repeats after them. After they invented several
> styles, one of them said, "Matt, sing it in Lojban!" And to my
> amazement and their delight, I could, and they followed along.
>
> I would not have done that if none of them had known what the language
was.
>
> -epkat
>
> On 9/27/06, Andrii Zvorygin <andrii.z@gmail.com> wrote:
> > .a'u I was just wondering if anyone here uses lojban when speaking (or
> > typing/e-mailing) to people that don't already know about lojban. If not
> > were you planning on it?
> >
> > .o'acu'e I myself try to throw in an attitudinal with translation in all
my
> > emails(all the recent ones i can recall), though .o'anai I rarely use
> > attitudinals otherwise, ku'i .a'o pe'i I'm slowly improving and now use
.ui
> > every now and again in speech, I've been thinking of telling the bus
driver
> > something along the lines of ".a'o do se xamgu I mean i hope good things
for
> > you", or some such. I think advertising Lojban is a simple and
worthwhile
> > lojban.
> >
> > What do you think?
> >
> > click reply below zo'onai.ai.ui I can hardly wait to find out
> >
>
>
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>
>