When I see a sentence like "mi zdani", why shold I understand it as "this house is mine" instead of "i'm a house"? I mean, I know it doesn't make sense, but I understood this language should be understood even by computers, and this means that it does not require thinking or knoledge (like the knowledge that that meaning doesn't make sense) for understaning sentences.I'm looking forwards to your answer!
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When I see a sentence like "mi zdani", why shold I understand it as "this house is mine" instead of "i'm a house"?
I mean, I know it doesn't make sense, but I understood this language should be understood even by computers, and this means that it does not require thinking or knoledge (like the knowledge that that meaning doesn't make sense) for understaning sentences.I'm looking forwards to your answer!
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la'o me. MorphemeAddict .me cusku di'eApart from the simple {ti mi zdani} "This is my home",
Now I wonder how to say "this home is mine". "ti du lo mi zdani" is
'this is my home'. Would it start with "lo vi zdani ..."?
if you do not want to say that it's the house you actually live in, but that it's related to you otherwise (or if you just want to be vague), you can say:
ti me mi moi lo zdani
"This is mine among the houses."
Or as a tanru:
ti zdani me mi moi
"This is a house type of mine." (sounds weird in English, but normal in Lojban)
Of course, you can also use {srana} or {ckini}:
lo vi zdani mi ckini
"This house is associated with me (by some relationship)."
Lots of flexibility!
mu'o mi'e la selpa'i
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Thank you! I think I catch it!I was mistaken because I didn't pay attention to the order of the components in the sentece.But now I need to say that I still didn't understand the correct order of the words:Is there any rule that determines what each placement (x1, x2, etc.) means, or maybe it should be learned for each word, or maybe there is no any accurate rule but understanding is done in anoter way (for example: according to the context), so that maybe there exist some different meanings to the same placement in different sentencs?
By the way, I was in a doubt wheather or not to ask this question in a new post...Thank you for the help!!
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Thank you! I think I catch it!
I was mistaken because I didn't pay attention to the order of the components in the sentece.But now I need to say that I still didn't understand the correct order of the words:Is there any rule that determines what each placement (x1, x2, etc.) means, or maybe it should be learned for each word, or maybe there is no any accurate rule but understanding is done in anoter way (for example: according to the context), so that maybe there exist some different meanings to the same placement in different sentencs?
.i mi'e la tsani mu'o
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When I see a sentence like "mi zdani", why shold I understand it as "this house is mine" instead of "i'm a house"? I mean, I know it doesn't make sense, but I understood this language should be understood even by computers, and this means that it does not require thinking or knoledge (like the knowledge that that meaning doesn't make sense) for understaning sentences.I'm looking forwards to your answer!
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On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 2:29 PM, Jacob Errington <nict...@gmail.com> wrote:On 28 March 2013 16:25, v4hn <m...@v4hn.de> wrote:On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 02:04:31PM -0600, Jonathan Jones wrote:By the way, is there already a documented list of outliers
> There are, however, exceptions to this, which is why
> many of us have the desire to enumerate and then expel
> the exceptions.
which should be changed? People go on and on about that
issue, but I didn't see a real list yet (though I also didn't search
for it - There is just never a link in any of the respective posts).Although this page has a lot of old, irrelevant content now.If you're talking about the regularization within semantic categories, such a list hasn't yet been produced, I think, probably due to the lack of a complete semantic categorization of gismu.
Last I heard, gleki was working on building that.
selpa'i linked a pretty decent list of this sort a while ago, though I've lost the link since.
On Friday, March 29, 2013 12:40:44 AM UTC+4, aionys wrote:On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 2:29 PM, Jacob Errington <nict...@gmail.com> wrote:On 28 March 2013 16:25, v4hn <m...@v4hn.de> wrote:On Thu, Mar 28, 2013 at 02:04:31PM -0600, Jonathan Jones wrote:By the way, is there already a documented list of outliers
> There are, however, exceptions to this, which is why
> many of us have the desire to enumerate and then expel
> the exceptions.
which should be changed? People go on and on about that
issue, but I didn't see a real list yet (though I also didn't search
for it - There is just never a link in any of the respective posts).Although this page has a lot of old, irrelevant content now.If you're talking about the regularization within semantic categories, such a list hasn't yet been produced, I think, probably due to the lack of a complete semantic categorization of gismu.
Last I heard, gleki was working on building that.No one can sto you from building alternative lists which is even preferable.