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A pair of how-do-i-say-it's
- To: John Cowan <cowan@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>, Eric Raymond <eric@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>, Eric Tiedemann <est@SNARK.THYRSUS.COM>
- Subject: A pair of how-do-i-say-it's
- From: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!CTR.COLUMBIA.EDU!shoulson>
- Date: Tue, 24 Mar 1992 22:39:44 -0500
- In-Reply-To: Chris Handley's message of Wed, 25 Mar 1992 09:51:29 GMT+1200
- Reply-To: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!CTR.COLUMBIA.EDU!shoulson>
- Sender: Lojban list <cbmvax!uunet!CUVMA.BITNET!pucc.Princeton.EDU!LOJBAN>
Chris Handley, in rejecting the proposed use of {ro bu'a zo'u} with {.ijo}:
>No, I do not think so. It is not quantified over all relationships but
>rather that there is one _specific_ (but unspecified) relationship which
>links GB to USA in sort of the same way as JM is linked to UK (GB?).
So then by John's magic theory that specified {bu'a} in prenices specifies
over the predicate, not the x1, we get:
le bu'a zo'u la buc. bu'a le merko gugde .ije(/whatever) la meidjr. bu'a
le brito gugde
for a particular relationship P: Bush P's US and Major P's UK
'Course, this begs the question of *which* P, bringing us right back where
we started. Maybe the use of {le'e} or {lo'e} will help to indicate the
one we want, but it's still beating around the bush (no pun intended).
~mark