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Re: single consonant words
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>Date: Tue, 15 Oct 1996 12:22:33 +0200
>From: "R.M. Uittenbogaard" <reneuit%SCI.KUN.NL@CUVMB.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU>
>I was just curious:
>Is it allowed to have single consonant words? Like this:
>mi viska la f. (not "la fy.")
> or la .f.
>mi se cmene zoi .f. bobo .f.
>Actually, I can see no problems here, although single-consonant words
>might sometimes require a pause before them (probably always except
>after LA or DOI).
Indeed, this has come up before. I remember once pointing out a cartoon in
Ju'i Lobypli (a former Lojban newsletter) which used "lat." as a cmene, and
I said that it was illegal because of the "la" which cannot be in cmene. I
also said that it probably didn't matter, though, since it didn't make
sense any other way. And Rosta, however, pointed out that there was
nothing in the rules about a cmene of "t", and indeed it's pronounceable,
since consonants may be pronounced with the (infamous) optional "buffer
vowel." He makes a good point, and while "t" may be a tough name, I
personally have no trouble using "f" as a cmene. Ivan Derzhanski and I, in
discussing names for letters in the Devanagari alphabet, decided we liked
"r." as a cmene (in r.bu) and even "r'r.", though that one may not pass
official muster.
All cmene require pauses before them except after LA or DOI.
~mark
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