So my question is, why is it better to have place structure files by sumti (and assume that listeners know the place structure for the brivlas you are using) than it is to just use grammatical morphemes? In this example, the English prepositions 'to' and 'from' tell the listener unambiguously that the following noun [phrase] represents the destination and source of the journey respectively.
Although this does not dampen my enthusiasm for Lojban, I would be interested to hear others' thoughts on this.
The roles _exist_? What is the role of dunda3? Is it the same as the one of
klama2, as suggested by the English preposition "to", or is it the same as
the role of xamgu2, as suggested by the use of the dative in Latin? In other
words, is it like the destination of a movement or the beneficiary of an act?
Also, what are the roles of pritu{1,2,3}?
I don't understand. If English "to" has multiple meanings then why should Lojban be polysemous just like English?
But if you want one morpheme for one meaning of English "to" this is how Lojban already works
There are also short forms of predicates. e.g. {seka'a} is kinda preposition that corresponds to the target of movement, roughly it's English "to". However, it's better to call such prepositions with a Lojbanic term "sumtcita" to avoid references to ambiguous western terms.
And lastly, I suggest learning Lojban, become fluent in it. Then we can talk about such things in Lojban itself. :)
On Sunday, 14 October 2012 12:22:20 UTC+1, gleki wrote:I don't understand. If English "to" has multiple meanings then why should Lojban be polysemous just like English?It absolutely shouldn't. One the most appealing features of Lojban to me is that each symbol has only one meaning. My point was not that a symbol should represent multiple meanings.But if you want one morpheme for one meaning of English "to" this is how Lojban already worksBut the morphemes aren't spoken, they are implied by the place structure. How does this work in practice if a novice has limited knowledge of the brivla place structures? And doesn't having to learn the place structure for each brivla add more learning load?
There are also short forms of predicates. e.g. {seka'a} is kinda preposition that corresponds to the target of movement, roughly it's English "to". However, it's better to call such prepositions with a Lojbanic term "sumtcita" to avoid references to ambiguous western terms.Ah yes I remember reading about the sumti tcita. Are they used in regular conversation?
And lastly, I suggest learning Lojban, become fluent in it. Then we can talk about such things in Lojban itself. :)I'm working on it ;) Personally I find it useful to discuss new languages metalingusitically in order to understand their internal mechanisms.
How can you learn Spanish/Japanese/whatever if you speak English?
The place structure of lojban is pretty clear. Even it's definition describe all places.This is usually not the case in textbooks of other languages.
You have to figure out how prepositions/case-markers/whatever work in any language.In the case of lojban there is dictionary and a textbook (only in English yet).
Lojban is the most flexible language I've ever met. So I wanna use both sumtcita and brivla. They just look like different styles of Lojban.
Believe me (I'm not a fanatic of Lojban), if you learn Lojban then understanding the syntax of other languages will be much easier.
I'd also like to point out that the set of place structures is fairly regular.
On Sunday, 14 October 2012 12:22:20 UTC+1, gleki wrote:I don't understand. If English "to" has multiple meanings then why should Lojban be polysemous just like English?It absolutely shouldn't. One the most appealing features of Lojban to me is that each symbol has only one meaning. My point was not that a symbol should represent multiple meanings.But if you want one morpheme for one meaning of English "to" this is how Lojban already worksBut the morphemes aren't spoken, they are implied by the place structure. How does this work in practice if a novice has limited knowledge of the brivla place structures? And doesn't having to learn the place structure for each brivla add more learning load?