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Hans Christian Andersen: countercomments
- To: John Cowan <cowan@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>, Eric Raymond <eric@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>, Eric Tiedemann <est@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>
- Subject: Hans Christian Andersen: countercomments
- From: Ivan A Derzhanski <cbmvax!uunet!COGSCI.ED.AC.UK!cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu!iad>
- Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1992 13:13:27 GMT
- In-Reply-To: nsn@AU.OZ.MU.EE.MULLIAN's message of Mon, 9 Mar 1992 18:43:14 +1000 <21407.9203090918@cogsci.ed.ac.uk
- Reply-To: Ivan A Derzhanski <cbmvax!uunet!COGSCI.ED.AC.UK!cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu!iad>
- Sender: Lojban list <cbmvax!uunet!CUVMA.BITNET!cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu!LOJBAN>
> Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1992 18:43:14 +1000
> From: nsn@AU.OZ.MU.EE.MULLIAN
>
> In-Reply-To: Your [Colin Fine's] message of "Fri, 06 Mar 92 19:10:07 GMT."
> <13762.9203061910@mail.bradford.ac.uk>
>
> My experimental cmavo, given
> lenu xy. cu broda cu galfi y'y. zy.
> produces
> xy. xe'e galfi y'y zy lenu xy. broda
> which once more matches the 1990 structure.
Can you use {xe'e} with na'e {galfi}, though? How did you decide that
{lenu xy. broda} has to become the fourth argument of {xe'e galfi}?
> In fact, I have never quite *liked* {tu'a}, and believe that it can often
> be omitted with no ambiguity. <...>
>
> That having been said, I already find a phrase of the type {mi troci le
> vorme} instead of {mi troci tu'a le vorme}=={mi troci lenu karyri'a le
> vorme} to be irritating. Mark has taken to {tu'a} even more than I. And
> the distinction is not always illdefined nor pointless. It's a matter of
> extent. And I welcome this as one further opportunity for stylistic
> divergence. (I suspect Ivan will be on your side).
I think having {tu'a} is a good idea, but being forced to use it all
the time is not. In particular, I believe that, if one of the places
of a certain predicate is defined so that whatever argument is there
must be prefixed by {tu'a} unless it is an abstraction (NU something),
then {tu'a} should be allowed to be elided as redundant.
But this is not the case in {ri selkecmlu ri'a tu'a lo carvi}. The
rain is as much of an event as {NU ...}, and you can be wet {ri'a lo
carvi} (no {tu'a} there), but in the case of {selkecmlu} we have an
indirect causal link. I think the same is true in the case of the
eiderdowns, since you can have things that are not NUs and still are
direct conditions of sensing.
Note that {tu'a} doesn't solve too many problems. What does {mi troci
tu'a le vorme} mean? Tried to what the door? Open it, close it,
break it, take it off its hinges? The literal translation of {mi
troci le vorme} in Bulgarian means `I taste the door' or maybe `I test
the door' (try to use it, see whether it works properly). In all
natural languages that I can think of, "want sthg" means `want to have
sthg' (whatever "have" may mean). In Lojban {djica tu'a lo nolraixli}
may mean `want to strangle a m.n.m.', `want to see off a m.n.m.'...
> > > {ni'a} is "below"; {mo'ini'a} is "downwards".
Why's that, by the way? The FAhA cmavo are described as "direction
modals", not "location modals". And some of them are clearly dynamic
in meaning.
> I remember your phrase "UI depend on the deontology of the speaker". Well,
> I went for "kau refers to the knower of the sentence it is in". Thus
> la djan. djuno ledu'u ri klama zo'ekau
> means John knows where he's going, not that John's going somewhere, and I
> know where. Right?
You mean to say that {kau} can only be used in a "knowing" sentence?
One with {djuno} as a predicate? Come on, Nick. This is totally absurd.
Ivan