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Re: [lojban] soi disant soi dissent
cu'u la xod.
>You also said "when context overwhelmingly allows it", which I, as an
>alleged "naturalist", can't stand. I also have not been convinced that
>recursion is always a bad thing.
OK, if this is about wording, then I don't want this proposal to be any
different in nature than the convention regarding {ke'a}. So remove the
'overwhelmingly'.
I also think what Mark and Colin did way back makes sense, but agree they
shouldn't have done it, so I'm happy to retract the x1 recursion
constraint.
> And we ARE determining usage. Our usage, from now on.
I will still weasel, I fear. I will advocate long-distance only in the
lessons, but I will also say "but soi vo'a will probably remain an
exception as used by most people." (Even if I didn't mention it in the
Lessons, Rob, people would find it in the archives, and people won't
unlearn it in practice.) "So vo'a *may* end in practice being defined as
long-distance by default, but short-distance when context favours that
reading -- for instance, soi vo'a." And all this in an appendix in the
lessons.
Would that be better?
--
== == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == == ==
Nick Nicholas, Breathing {le'o ko na rivbi fi'inai palci je tolvri danlu}
nicholas@uci.edu -- Miguel Cervantes tr. Jorge LLambias