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RE: [lojban] Re: Another stab at a Record on ce'u
la and cusku di'e
Nick:
> And {mi mansa do leka prami} is
> bounded-ka: the {ce'u} in the {ka}-clause is understood as filled in by
the
> x1 of {mansa}. But {mi tavla leka prami} is Free-ka: the {ka}-clause is
> being treated like any {nu}-clause, or any {da}, or anything at all you
can
> talk about. It's ce'u isn't being filled in, nor especially being
> concentrated on.
{ka} is (nowadays) intrinsically free, I feel, and the expropriation of ka
for bound-ka contexts should not affect our understanding of the rules
and conventions that pertain to ka.
I would have said {ka} is almost exclusively used in Nick's bound
contexts: {ti mutce le ka bebna}, {ta tu frica le ka barda},
{ti mi xajmi le ka xunre}, and so on. I can't think of any use
of free-ka outside of discussions about language.
x1 satisfies evaluator x2 in property (ka)/state x3
For starters there's something wrong if x3 can be a property *or* a
state.
There's plenty of these ambiguous definitions in the gi'uste.
I suppose x3 is either a property of x1, or an event for which
x1 is responsible.
Second, if x1 has to be an argument within the x3, why is this
not just a sumti raising, such that the underlying satisfier is
the x3?
The same could be said of any selbri with a ka-place.
{ta mutce le ka barda} could be thought as
{le nu ta barda cu mutce zi'o}.
mu'o mi'e xorxes
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