la tipitr park cusku di'e
All natural human languages that I know of [...] have (1) lots and lots of words of the type "stick, stone, [...] star", (2) lots and lots of words of the type "big, small, long, [...] dry," and (3) and lots and lots of words of the type "eat, drink, bite, [...] hear." This is true, as an empirical fact, of English, German, [...] and Lojban.
It is true of Lojban, although if we take place structures seriously in Lojban classes (1) and (2) are much smaller than in other languages, while most words fall in class (3). Only one-place predicates can be of classes (1) and (2). All others must be of class (3), because they don't refer to a property or bundle of properties but always to relationships. Thus the Lojban word {botpi} is not class (2) like the English word "bottle". It does not refer to the bundle of properties that make up a bottle, it refers to the relationship that exists between bundles of bottle properties and bundles of bottle contents properties. Similarly {barda} is not class (1) like "big". This may violate some universal that languages have lots and lots of words (maybe most) in classes (1) and (2), but at least as defined, most Lojban words are class (3): relationships. co'o mi'e xorxes ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com