I believe that hope and desire are1.human emotions2.can't be derived from anything else. They are semantic primes.
On Wednesday, August 29, 2012 8:30:44 AM UTC+4, .djo,is. wrote:It isn't apparent to me. If you desire something, don't you hope it will be true? The difference makes more sense in between pacna and djica, but why do we need two attitudinals?
If there is a difference, is there an example where you might say ".a'o .aunai broda" (or something similar)?
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mu'o
So we don't lose track of agreements like these, can we develop an archival system? This could be a 'related articles' page for these words. ".a'o can be expressed as ba'a .au with a similar but not perfectly parallel meaning." might be a good summary.
My first thought is to make a wiktionary-style wiki, but y'all are better with that than I so I shall leave it to the experts.
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On 30 August 2012 17:32, la gleki <gleki.is...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can't we clearly define UI in terms of {sei broda} after all?
> So you are saying that {.a'o}={sei kanpe je djica}, right?
{a'o} and {kanpe je djica} seem to generally mean the same kind of emotion, yes.
Some notes:
{ui} is a direct expression of happiness, whereas {(zo'e) gleki} is a
descriptive statement that someone feels / felt / will feel happiness
-- same emotion, different functions. Also, with {ui}, the experiencer
is the speaker by default; with {sei gleki}, it can be non-speakers.
{sei gleki} can be used to translate adverbial stuff, such as
"happily", whose explicit or implicit subject (x1) can be other than
the speaker. So, the {sei broda} form cannot always substitute for or
define UI.
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I suppose the idea here is {sei} as a sort of stage direction, the usual "Alice said" supplemented now by comments about Alice's presumed state of mind. Using this for {a'o} and the like seems misguided, because 1) they are not metalinguistic, but part of the speech stream -- not someone els'e remark, but the speakers expression; 2) they are not truthvalued, as the {sei} comments are.
.a'o isn't kanpe je djica, it'n pacna. Has everybody forgotten about pacna?
.a'o isn't kanpe je djica, it'n pacna. Has everybody forgotten about pacna?
good point. If au and ai both have pretty much exact bridi equivalents, and those bridi have pretty much exact english equivalents it doesn't seem like we're necessarily talking about a lojban question any more. More like a psychology question, which is certainly still interesting to listen to :)
.a'o isn't kanpe je djica, it'n pacna. Has everybody forgotten about pacna?
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good point. If au and ai both have pretty much exact bridi equivalents, and those bridi have pretty much exact english equivalents it doesn't seem like we're necessarily talking about a lojban question any more. More like a psychology question, which is certainly still interesting to listen to :)
Good move! Semantic primitives play no significant role in Lojban and, if the point of all this is to get to a primitive list of attitudes, then it is a misguided project from a Lojbanic point of view.
Who will discuss semantics primes if not us? Any forum you are aware of? I'm afraid they are discussed nowhere.
Who will discuss semantics primes if not us? Any forum you are aware of? I'm afraid they are discussed nowhere.Guaspi? Any other conlang group? University level linguistics courses? Gismu aren't primes, the set of UI aren't meant to be primes, and nothing in the language is meant to be the most basic set of anything. We *really* need to hammer that into everybody and start adopting a policy of using what's there instead of reinventing the wheel. Look, and I mean seriously and earnestly look, for a solution using what is already available to you. If it isn't a problem, don't fix it, and if you absolutely are completely unable to do it with the current grammar, we'll talk then.
Who will discuss semantics primes if not us? Any forum you are aware of? I'm afraid they are discussed nowhere.Guaspi? Any other conlang group? University level linguistics courses? Gismu aren't primes, the set of UI aren't meant to be primes, and nothing in the language is meant to be the most basic set of anything. We *really* need to hammer that into everybody and start adopting a policy of using what's there instead of reinventing the wheel. Look, and I mean seriously and earnestly look, for a solution using what is already available to you. If it isn't a problem, don't fix it, and if you absolutely are completely unable to do it with the current grammar, we'll talk then.
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