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Re: [lojban] I almost caught the train



At 08:22 PM 03/12/2001 -0500, pycyn@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 3/12/2001 6:00:28 PM Central Standard Time,
lojban@lojban.org writes:
<There is no grammar for numbers so that is a string of 4
digits, the first of which is large.>

Ambigous:  "there is no grammar for numbers.  Therefore, panono is a string
of four digits, the first of which is large.

so'apanono, not panono

 The first part of this is false, I hope,

Numbers are read as a string of digits in order. If you want to call that a grammar, there is one, but there are only informal conventions (typically those of modern mathematics) and not rules for interpreting a string of digits.

and the second in this context, seems to mean there cannot be
grammatical numbers more than a digit long, especially if the first is
large(r than the rest?).

No, so'a in a string of digits is going to be large-for-a-digit, perhaps in base 10 an 8 or a 9.

"No part of the grammar of numbers allows a number to be a string of digits,
if the first is large"

Did I say this? I was trying to say that we haven't defined any grammar to interpret such a string, nor any conventions.

 I suppose "large" in both these cases means something
special, in this case PA4?
Somehow, I had the notion that "at least 100" was {su'o panono}

That is how I would read it. though I would write the su'o together with the panono in a single word. The space implies they are separate words/concepts, but grammatically they are not.

I now gather that it is {panono su'o}.

I'm not sure how I would take panonosu'o. Your way might be plausible, but a 4 digit interpretation with the 4th digit non-zero is also plausible.

  So, "almost 100" is going to be {panono so'a}

To me, that looks like 1008-1009, in base 10.

<>I have no suggestion for "barely over 100" off the top of mu head.

panoso'u>
But then {panonosu'o} means "a whole lot more than a thousand" or some such,
and the other PA+PA4 get really weird.

PA+PA4 is not a convention we see in math notations, to my knowledge.

<soso'a or even soda'a

or if you want the base n solution, da'ada'a

I might also try panononi'u,>
I'm lost.  What does "all except 9" or "almost 9" have to do with the cases
and what does?

The first could be read "ninety-largish.

The second could be read "all-but-one-ty all-but-one", where all but one in a digits context must implicitly be the base number minus one. True, by one convention of interpreting da'a, it could also mean all-but (all-but-one), but that is the same as "one".

What does "all except all except" have to do with base n?
and -100 with anything.

No that is 100-minus.

Except that they all show that the PA4s go at the right end.

PA4 can go at either end.  But how do you interpret it?

The answer is to remember that PA in a string of numbers is a digit. or perhaps a local digit-operator where the former makes no sense.

ro as a trailing digit is plausibly the base number; thus soro is "ninety-all" or "ninety-ten" = 100.

"roso" has by usage been given a conventional interpretation "all nine", though perhaps that should be roboi so, except that this makes the grammar explicitly two separate digits, which don't always interact in the way we might expect based on usage before a sumti (the five, fifty-five gallon drums example of classic Loglan 1 is muboi mumu lo dekpu lante).

da'a is "all but", defaulting to all-but-one. As a digit therefore it must be one less than the base number. As a first digit, it has a special convention like ro does.

so'a thru so'u as digits I think of as descending approximate numbers - in base ten, something like 8-9, 6-8, 4-6, 2-4, 1-2.

su'e has a conventional interpretation if it precedes a number - at most that number; as a trailing or medial digit, I can imagine a few mutually inconsistent uses.

su'o would be in the same boat, except that it's default value is "at least some" and not "at least none" and thus it is not an exact mirror of su'e but of da'a, so as a digit it means "1 or more", and this makes sense in a medial or trailing position, while allowing it in the leading position to be interpreted as su'o[number].

du'e and mo'u and rau don't fit any standard mathematical interpretation as digits in a string. What digit-value could they mean in terms of base-notation systems? I thus might try to use them attitudinally on another number either preceding or following it: sodu'e is "nine, and that is too much".

ji'i on the other hand does have a standard notational usage, often written as "~", so "ji'iso" is "~9" or approximately nine. I once or twice have seen the approximately sign also used interdigitally to show where exact numbers separate from the approximation (i.e. to communicate significant figures), so I would read "panoji'ipa" as "101" with only the first two digits significant/certain and the last digit a guesstimate. Trailing, ji'i could either mean that all the digits are significant, and/or that the whole number is an approximation, which is the same thing as ji'i
preceding.

I think that covers all the PA4s, as I would try to use them. None are set in stone unless they appear in the Book, but they seem to be plausible interpretations of a digit with an inexact value.

The hard ones aren't the PA4s, but rather the PA5s. What might "papaipa" mean? Who knows?

lojbab
--
lojbab                                             lojbab@lojban.org
Bob LeChevalier, President, The Logical Language Group, Inc.
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