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Re: noxemol ce'u
la pycyn cusku di'e
> <I would call {le mamta be ce'u} abuse of notation if it refers
> to a function and not to a mother sort of critter.>
>
> I know. But {ce'u} just does that sort of thing, changing
perfectly good
> expressions into functions, whose values flow back to the right
sorts of
> things.
Normally, {le broda} is {ko'a voi ke'a broda}.
Is {le broda be ce'u} also {ko'a voi ke'a broda ce'u}?
Or does ce'u block this sort otransformation?
> The point now is, we have this perfectly legitimate sumti and a
theory about
> what it should mean drawn from logic. Should we use this material
or not.
I think I will pass.
> We have to explain the construction somehow. There may be other
theories
> about what it means, but none have surfaced yet and they will
probably not
> have the good backing of this one nor fit so well into the general
theory of
> how {ce'u} and {makau} work.
I don't think it fits all that well.
{le mamta} is clearly distinct from {le du'u makau mamta},
and can never be a substitute for it. I don't see why
{le mamta be ce'u} should be allowed to stand for
{le du'u makau mamta ce'u}. English allows both substitutions.
Lojban, the way I understand it, does not allow either.
mu'o mi'e xorxes