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Re: [lojban] RE: Orcutt (again?!)
From: And Rosta <arosta@uclan.ac.uk>
li'o
Michael, there's something weird about your message formatting
alas, when i send from where i'm housesitting this week, the
combination of hotmail + a strange PC, wants to run my messages
through some kind of crummy Word Perfect thingy first-sorry!
At any rate, in reply to you, surely DJUNO = savoir and SE SLABU =
connaitre,
i thought i might be misremembering...
not the other way around. In general when discussing logical distinctions
I'm
reluctant to sweep it under the carpet by simply defining appropriate
lujvo,
but in this case you may be right that the difference between knowing what
CAT
means and knowing about cats is related to the savoir/connaitre difference.
Still, I remain to be convinced, and it is perfectly possible (and in fact
true)
that ASH and EPAMINONDAS are words that are familiar (se slabu) to me yet
that
have meanings that I know only a small incomplete and inadequate portion
of.
how much of the meaning of a word do you know or need to know?
good question. a lot of the words i use, have been acquired through
reading; & once in awhile a strict dictionary lookup will show i
didn't quite get it... on the other hand, to a scientist or other
technician, the definition may be enough to distinguish it from other
words, while remaining totally inadequate for scientific purposes.
and to name a thing, moreover, does not necessarily require you to
know the entire range of variety that that thing may take... on the
other hand, as a poet many words to me have the overtone of all the
contexts i have read it in, which is far more than any dictionary
definition & to me, the truer one. so, i guess what i am saying is,
the meaning of a word depends upon but is not limited by usage,
because usage is non-uniform.
this is probably a long way from the first thought of the thread.
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