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Can't you just say "la'e me'o denpa bu", without "lo me..."?
What's the real difference between "me" and "la'e"?
And one more thing I would like to ask:How do you express "triple periods" in lojban? For example, when someone start saying something but doesn't finish the sentence, but rather fade out in the middle of it, or similar cases.
And is there any lojbanic way to show that text has been omitted, for example in quotations?
On 20 November 2012 23:03, Sebastian <so.co...@gmail.com> wrote:And one more thing I would like to ask:How do you express "triple periods" in lojban? For example, when someone start saying something but doesn't finish the sentence, but rather fade out in the middle of it, or similar cases.Fading out like that can be ungrammatical in some cases, but in others it's something I'm not entirely sure how to render in Lojban.
?On 20 November 2012 23:03, Sebastian <so.co...@gmail.com> wrote:Can't you just say "la'e me'o denpa bu", without "lo me..."?
What's the real difference between "me" and "la'e"?Well for starters, their grammatical functions are entirely different, but in particular, me means "x1 is among the referents of [sumti]"; not sure off the top of my head what the x2 does under xorlo / xorxo {me}. As for {la'e}, it dereferences the sumti, and refers to those things to which the symbol of the sumti are indicative. In other words, {la'e zoi url http://example.org url} differs drastically from {lo me zoi url http://example.org url} because the former refers to the actual web site or its content, whereas the second refers still to another text.And one more thing I would like to ask:How do you express "triple periods" in lojban? For example, when someone start saying something but doesn't finish the sentence, but rather fade out in the middle of it, or similar cases.Fading out like that can be ungrammatical in some cases, but in others it's something I'm not entirely sure how to render in Lojban.And is there any lojbanic way to show that text has been omitted, for example in quotations?Of course, there's a cmavo for that {li'o}. It's a UI, so a free modifier, and the surrounding text needs to stay grammatical.
Oh OK. I have another question. I know that when you say a Lojban vowel, you add "bu" after it, but what do you say after a consonant?
Why would you want to elide two words together like that, when you can just space between them?
Having the full stop or not makes a difference in the meaning ofthe wordhis
What do you mean by "delineate"his
How in the world does a full stop "describe" a wordhisa