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Re: [lojban] word for "www" (was: Archive location.)
At 11:56 AM 9/11/02 -0400, Invent Yourself wrote:
On a parallel note, it's interesting that the people who were around when
the notion of lujvo was being developed have a quite different
understanding of the intent behind lujvo than those who came much later in
the game. Poor communication?
Remember that the person who developed the idea of lujvo is dead, and most
of the stuff wherein he defined the concept exists only on paper. Only
Loglan 1 exists on line of JCB's defining documents
http://www.loglan.org/Loglan1/index.html
and his discussion of lujvo in that book basically says that they
("complexes" in his words) are words that are neither "primitive" (gismu)
nor borrowings (fu'ivla) and which have a "defining metaphor" (i.e. tanru),
and he states that there is a preference for making a lujvo over making a
borrowing if one is plausible.
Thus discussion of "Zipfean" influences on lujvomaking require one to go
back to the pre-Loglan 1 documents, and to discussions thereof in "The
Loglanist". Some of these kinds of discussions may be in JL and in the
early years of Lojban List.
JCB placed far less importance on predictability of place structures; the
concept of dikyjvo rules was first suggested by Jim Carter in 1992-3 and
elaborated by Nick at that time. Both the predictability of patterns of
meaning and avoidance of malglico were things JCB placed little importance
on, which is why he made a lujvo equivalent to nanmygasnu for the concept
"to man a ship". Predictability of meaning was pretty much a Lojban
innovation, with a limited adoption by TLI thereof in 1990
http://www.loglan.org/Articles/complex-making.html
I think that the attitude in recent years has been rather than to force a
particular concept of lujvo on Lojban users, that we should stick to our
principles and simply encourage people to use the language. Something that
gets expressed as a lujvo then is a lujvo. Thus a Helsem-ism is as much
Lojban as a dikyjvo. I intended to do no "weeding" of usage, and my
standard for the dictionary was always intended to be to try to include
words of all kinds but especially to include those that had met some
arbitrary level of usage (the requirement being that they had to be
well-formed and have a definable place structure).
If a print dictionary has a smaller set of words than we have definitions
for because of the costs of print, I still intend that there exist an
online dictionary which will be unabridged and possibly continuously
evolving. Whether Jay's project will meet the needs for the online version
I can't say, since I've never quite grasped what he is trying for.
lojbab
--
lojbab lojbab@lojban.org
Bob LeChevalier, President, The Logical Language Group, Inc.
2904 Beau Lane, Fairfax VA 22031-1303 USA 703-385-0273
Artificial language Loglan/Lojban: http://www.lojban.org