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Re: [lojban] Commas and vowel pairs
> "Commas are never required: no two Lojban words differ solely because
> of the presence or placement of a comma."
This would seem to imply that you can omit the comma in a word
like "banrkorea" and it will be implied by the otherwise
impermissible vowel pair. Practically, I don't see why this would
cause any problems, though clusters like "aa" look ugly and
loglandic :-)
While we're at it, the book also says (Chapter 3, section 3):
"The comma is used to indicate a syllable break within a word,
generally one that is not obvious to the reader. Such a comma is
written to separate syllables, but indicates that there must be no
pause between them, in contrast to the period. Between two
vowels, a comma indicates that some type of glide may be
necessary to avoid a pause that would split the two syllables into
separate words. It is always legal to use the apostrophe (IPA [h])
sound in pronouncing a comma."
Since the comma can be and often is used in a place such as
"ban,rkore,a", does that mean that that word can be pronounced
/banhrkorEha/? Can it be written "ban'rkore'a"? Maybe it should
have been specified that the comma can be pronounced as an
apostrophe whenever it's between vowels.
co'o mi'e adam