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Re: [lojban] Request for grammar clarifications




la pycyn cusku di'e

I will yield to more expert opinion on this, but reasonableness and The Book
both suggest that {de'i} marks the date on the letter, not present date or
the date the letter was received or...

All I can find in The Book about {de'i} is that it is mentioned as
one of the BAIs that would be useful with relative clauses, as
opposed to attached to a bridi.

The first reasonable interpretation I get when using it to add a
place to a selbri is that it tags the date of the event. That is
what {detri} means after all. So for example:

   la uolt uitman mrobi'o di'e li 1892
   Walt Whitman died in 1892.

The problem with introducing special exceptions like {ti xatra
la djan de'i li 1892} to mean that 1892 is the date on ti
instead of the date when the relationship holds is that it
seems totally arbitrary. What does {la djan mrilu ti de'i
li 1892} mean? Is 1982 the date when the event happened, or is
it the date on ti? Is the {mrilu} relationship treated
differently than the {xatra} relationship? So Lojban does have
nouns and verbs after all?

> Can you say {le vi karce cu me la ford.}?

Since the meaning of {me} shifted, this one has wandered areound a bit. But
since that meaning has stablized as "is an instance of things called" it
seems that the car is OK.

But are Fords really ever called by the name "Ford"? Some people do
give names to their cars, but I never heard anyone name their Ford
"Ford". "Can I take one of the cars? Yes, take Ford." That's not
how it goes. "Take the Ford" is perfectly natural, but there "Ford"
is being used as a common noun, not as a name. "Take the Ford" is
just like "take the van". That it is written with a capital letter
surely is irrelevant.

A different question is whether {me} has the power to change a name
(only brand names?) into their common noun sense, so that {me la ford}
means "is a Ford" instead of "is the one named Ford". Unlike the
way that {me la djan} means "is the one named John" and not "is
a John".

co'o mi'e xorxes


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