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Re: Quantifiers
la dilyn cusku di'e
> Hmm. Would
> le ni ke'a nanmu ne'i le kumfa kei be le namcu cu du ci
> be the panstakingly precise version? (I'm using the currently floating
> proposal for the use of {ke'a} here.)
I don't think you can get any precise version using {ni}. The x2 of
{ni} is a scale, I don't understand how a number can be a scale, but
then I've no idea how to fill that place either. I'm also not sure I
understand {ke'a} there. ({ci} should be {li ci}, {ci} by itself is not
a sumti.)
The painlessly precise version is {ci nanmu cu nenri le kumfa}, why do
you want a painstakingly precise one?
Maybe you could say:
le namcu pe lei nanmu pe ne'i le kumfa cu du li ci
[...]
> Here's my point: suppose {ko'a} has three referents (the three books
> above). Then
> pa ko'a cu cpana le jubme
> is (of course) exactly one of the books is on the table.
Yes.
> In most
> contexts {ko'a} could be expanded into {le xunre cukta .e le blabi
> cukta .e le blanu cukta}.
Only when it has its default quantifier {ro}.
> But evidently not when it's quantified:
> there's no way to do the expansion grammtically.
There is, but it is not trivial.
To make it easier, say {[ro] ko'a} is {le xunre cukta .e le blabi
cukta}.
Then {su'o ko'a} is {le xunre cukta .a le blabi cukta}.
And {pa ko'a} is {le xunre cukta .onai le blabi cukta}.
With three things it already becomes quite unmanageable, except for {ro
ko'a}, which gives all {.e}s and {su'o ko'a}, which gives all {.a}s.
Other quantifiers are hard to do.
Jorge
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