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Re: Qs: VhVhV & PAPAMEI &c.
la .and. cusku di'e
> (1) In trisyllabic cmavo, e.g. {laaa}, {la'a'a}, is the stress
> {laAa} or {lAaa}? Or can it be either?
Stress within cmavo is free.
> (2) Is {re re mei} a suivla meaning "two pairs", or is it a sentence
> meaning "there is a twenty-two-some"?
The latter.
> Either way, what does one add
> to get the right bracketing? {re boi re mei}?
Yes.
> (3) Given that (i-ii) are synonymous ("Not every person's a man")
>
> i. na nanmu fa ro prenu
> ii. ro prenu cu na nanmu
>
> ["Every person is not a man" = {ro prenu na ku nanmu}]
>
> I'd have thought iii-iv shd also be synonymous
>
> iii. koa ba klama pu ku
> iv. pu ku koa ba klama
>
> But according to the tense paper iii-iv differ. Is there a
> rationale to this?
The desire to have "puku" not a mere synonym for "pu zo'e", but rather a
semantic equivalent of a selbri tcita that can float around the bridi.
> (4) Can anyone remind me what the technical name is for the
> constituent that complements LE (e.g. the bracketed constituent
> in {le [speni be la lojbab]})?
A "sumti-tail" according to the grammar, although the term is rarely
used (jimc calls it an "S-bridi" if I remember correctly).
> (5a) What do VI, ZI, VEHA & ZEHA used as sumtcita mean?
As of now (nobody having proposed a formal change AFAIK), VI and ZI
indicate the reference point from which the bridi-event is said to be
so-and-so-much distanct in space or time respectively; VEhA and ZEhA
haven't been prescribed.
> (5b) What was the upshot of the discussion of a while ago about
> how to specify exact extents for VI, ZI, VEHA & ZEHA?
Beats me.
--
John Cowan cowan@ccil.org
e'osai ko sarji la lojban.