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Re: [lojban] nelci
sbelknap scripsit:
> I just had an interesting conversation with my son, who is five. We were
> talking about <nelci>. Quite often, when I ask him if he likes X, he says no,
> even though he has never tasted X. I then complain that he has never tasted X,
> so how can he say he doesn't like it?
I suspect that this has nothing to do with language or negation. Kids actually
move from "mi na nelci" to "mi to'e nelci", and it's supposed that this is
a biological gadget to prevent them from eating stuff that their culture
doesn't eat, and may in fact be toxic. Try googling for "disgust evolution".
> I'm going to have to reread what John
> had to say about negation. As I recall, the grammar is quite lucid on this
> topic.
Thank you. That particular chapter was written by lojbab, as a matter of fact.
--
John Cowan jcowan@reutershealth.com www.reutershealth.com www.ccil.org/~cowan
"It's the old, old story. Droid meets droid. Droid becomes chameleon.
Droid loses chameleon, chameleon becomes blob, droid gets blob back
again. It's a classic tale." (Kryten, Red Dwarf)
- References:
- nelci
- From: sbelknap <sbelknap@UIC.EDU>