Talk:BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

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Posted by rlpowell on Fri 19 of Nov., 2004 19:48 GMT posts: 14214 Two things:

"The tag modifies another selbri" — IMO, it modifies a bridi, not a selbri.

My parser can do ".i fi'o broda bo" without requiring fe'u.

-Robin

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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by xorxes on Sat 20 of Nov., 2004 03:21 GMT posts: 1912

Robin: > "The tag modifies another selbri" — IMO, it modifies a bridi, not a selbri.

The usual story has been that tags add a place to the selbri, but I tend to agree it makes more sense to consider that they modify a bridi. In fact that's what I do when expanding for example {broda ki'u ko'a} as {ko'a krinu lo nu broda}.

> My parser can do ".i fi'o broda bo" without requiring fe'u.

What does it do with {i fi'o broda bo brode}?

mu'o mi'e xorxes



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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

rlpowell Posted by rlpowell on Sat 20 of Nov., 2004 03:21 GMT posts: 14214 On Fri, Nov 19, 2004 at 02:42:55PM -0800, Jorge Llamb?as wrote: > > Robin: > > "The tag modifies another selbri" — IMO, it modifies a bridi, > > not a selbri. > > The usual story has been that tags add a place to the selbri, but > I tend to agree it makes more sense to consider that they modify a > bridi. In fact that's what I do when expanding for example {broda > ki'u ko'a} as {ko'a krinu lo nu broda}.

OK>

> > My parser can do ".i fi'o broda bo" without requiring fe'u. > > What does it do with {i fi'o broda bo brode}?

First pass: text=( I=( i ) FIhO=( fi'o ) BRIVLA=( broda ) BO=( bo ) BRIVLA=( brode ) ) Second pass: text text1 |- I: i |- tenseModal |- FIhO: fi'o |- selbri6 |- BRIVLA: broda |- BO: bo |- BRIVLA: brode

Hmmm. That's interesting. If a sumti follows bo, that ends the fi'o, but it will keep snarfing bo connected selbri into the fi'o. Which is probably the right thing.

On the other hand:

Second pass: text text1 |- I: i |- tenseModal | |- FIhO: fi'o | |- BRIVLA: broda | |- FEhU: fe'u |- BO: bo |- BRIVLA: brode

So yeah, fe'u is probably better.

(I've split up the morphology in the parser, by the way.)


-Robin


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Wed 12 of Jan., 2005 01:50 GMT Re: BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants Two things:

"The tag modifies another selbri" — IMO, it modifies a bridi, not a selbri.

My parser can do ".i fi'o broda bo" without requiring fe'u.

-Robin


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Mon 05 of Nov., 2007 12:49 GMT On 11/4/07, arj wrote: > > Why does the table in this overlap with other BPFK sections?

So as to have all "short fi'o-forms", i.e. all (single word) sumtcita collected in one place. The table is still incomplete though.

>The columns for se, te, etc. are empty for the lower half of the table.

Yes, that's a quirk of the grammar that should be fixed. There's no reason not to allow {se ca'u} along with {ti'a} for example, just as we have {crane} along with {se trixe}.

>What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita?

It's useful to have definitions of Lojban words in Lojban, not just in English.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by lojbab on Mon 05 of Nov., 2007 18:19 GMT posts: 162 Jorge Llambas wrote: > On 11/4/07, arj wrote: > >>Why does the table in this overlap with other BPFK sections? > > > So as to have all "short fi'o-forms", i.e. all (single word) sumtcita > collected in one place. The table is still incomplete though. > > >>The columns for se, te, etc. are empty for the lower half of the table. > > > Yes, that's a quirk of the grammar that should be fixed. There's no > reason not to allow {se ca'u} along with {ti'a} for example, just as we > have {crane} along with {se trixe}. > >>What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita? > > It's useful to have definitions of Lojban words in Lojban, not just in English.

It may be worth noting that the original intent was that the "brivla equivalents" of the BAI words were etymological mnemonics rather than definitional. I understand that this intent may have been long overtaken by usage.

ca'u, so far as I know, is still in a separate selma'o and not in BAI, so it not a "quirk of the grammar" that causes it to be different from BAI words in its grammar. Rather, it is a novelty to try to generalize all of the one word sumtcita as necessarily being conceptually equivalent because they can share that grammar role.

Still, I won't rule out accepting such a proposal at the end of the game, provided that it is submitted as a distinct proposal, and not something that is part of the documentation of the old baseline (and preferably not as something that is adopted in the middle of the game like xorlo).

lojbab


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Mon 05 of Nov., 2007 18:38 GMT On 11/5/07, Robert LeChevalier wrote: > > ca'u, so far as I know, is still in a separate selma'o and not in BAI, > so it not a "quirk of the grammar" that causes it to be different from > BAI words in its grammar. Rather, it is a novelty to try to generalize > all of the one word sumtcita as necessarily being conceptually > equivalent because they can share that grammar role.

That's what I meant by "a quirk of the grammar". The meaning and generalization of the use of SE from BAI to non-BAI tcita is obvious, and it is thus just an accident of the historical development of the language that it is not part of the grammar.

> Still, I won't rule out accepting such a proposal at the end of the > game, provided that it is submitted as a distinct proposal, and not > something that is part of the documentation of the old baseline (and > preferably not as something that is adopted in the middle of the game > like xorlo).

It is already proposed somewhere else, it is not mentioned in this page. The only thing mentioned here is that for example {fi'o selcra} and {ca'u} have the same meaning.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 08:05 GMT posts: 953 On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 09:47:28AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > On 11/4/07, arj wrote: > > > >What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita? > > It's useful to have definitions of Lojban words in Lojban, not just in English.

No. Any word must have only one official definition. Anything else would be opening the door wide open for contradiction.

Granted, we can have such a list that is informative, not normative, but why should the BPFK make such a list?

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ 7% unemployment is no problem, according to 93% of the population.


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 08:07 GMT posts: 953 On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 03:34:32PM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > On 11/5/07, Robert LeChevalier wrote: > > > > ca'u, so far as I know, is still in a separate selma'o and not in BAI, > > so it not a "quirk of the grammar" that causes it to be different from > > BAI words in its grammar. Rather, it is a novelty to try to generalize > > all of the one word sumtcita as necessarily being conceptually > > equivalent because they can share that grammar role. > > That's what I meant by "a quirk of the grammar". The meaning and > generalization of the use of SE from BAI to non-BAI tcita is obvious, > and it is thus just an accident of the historical development of the > language that it is not part of the grammar.

I agree with Bob here. Stag unification may be obvious, but it was never intended nor hinted to by the founders. It should be taken to its own proposal.

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ 7% unemployment is no problem, according to 93% of the population.


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 14:47 GMT On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 09:47:28AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > > On 11/4/07, arj wrote: > > > > > >What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita? > > > > It's useful to have definitions of Lojban words in Lojban, not just in English. > > No. Any word must have only one official definition. Anything else would > be opening the door wide open for contradiction.

And English has to be the language of official definitons of Lojban words?

> Granted, we can have such a list that is informative, not normative, but > why should the BPFK make such a list?

Because it's useful. Any reason why not?

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 14:59 GMT On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > I agree with Bob here. Stag unification may be obvious, but it was never > intended nor hinted to by the founders. It should be taken to its own proposal.

See:


http://www.lojban.org/tiki/Internal%20grammar%20of%20tags

There is no mention of this on the "BPFK section: sumtcita formants" page.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 17:28 GMT posts: 953 On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 11:46:15AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > On Mon, Nov 05, 2007 at 09:47:28AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > > > On 11/4/07, arj wrote: > > > > > > > >What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita? > > > > > > It's useful to have definitions of Lojban words in Lojban, not just in English. > > > > No. Any word must have only one official definition. Anything else would > > be opening the door wide open for contradiction. > > And English has to be the language of official definitons of Lojban words?

Yes, unfortunately, since some BPFK commissioners cannot read Lojban at an advanced level.

> > Granted, we can have such a list that is informative, not normative, but > > why should the BPFK make such a list? > > Because it's useful. Any reason why not?

In short, because it is not the BPFK's business to do that.

Quoting from the baseline document:

"It is intended that this effort ie. brief definitions of the cmavo shall take priority over work on other tasks charged to the byfy."

The rump BPFK (ie. after the completion of the language design) may sanction texts as baseline-compliant, but I can't see any mention in this document that the BPFK should provide teaching aids or the like.

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ The savvy DXer will usually bet a pair of nickels he can pinpoint the DXCC country of the "chopity-chow-pit chow-chow-pi-chow" even before he hears the call sign. -John F. Lindholm, QST vol. 66 no. 3 p. 83


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 17:35 GMT posts: 953 On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 11:51:23AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > > > I agree with Bob here. Stag unification may be obvious, but it was never > > intended nor hinted to by the founders. It should be taken to its own proposal. > > See: > > > http://www.lojban.org/tiki/Internal%20grammar%20of%20tags > > There is no mention of this on the "BPFK section: sumtcita formants" page.

Okay, I may be misusing terminology here, but it was never the intention that all sumtcita (with the possible exception of those in BAI) should be strictly equivalent with fi'o + brivla.

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ XP kjennes ... sprengt. Som om noe har eksplodert der.


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 20:40 GMT On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 11:46:15AM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > > > > And English has to be the language of official definitons of Lojban words? > > Yes, unfortunately, since some BPFK commissioners cannot read Lojban > at an advanced level.

Anyone for whom "fi'o broda" is too advanced should probably resign as a BPFK commissioner. :-)

> > > Granted, we can have such a list that is informative, not normative, but > > > why should the BPFK make such a list? > > > > Because it's useful. Any reason why not? > > In short, because it is not the BPFK's business to do that. > > Quoting from the baseline document: > > "It is intended that this effort ie. brief definitions of the cmavo shall take > priority over work on other tasks charged to the byfy."

These are brief definitions of cmavo, albeit not of the cmavo of this section nor in the favourite language of the BPFK.

I still think brief definitions in Lojban are not a bad thing for the BPFK to produce, and collecting all sumtcita in one table is a useful thing to have.

If the table is an impediment to voting on this section, I will move it somewhere else when the vote is called.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 21:00 GMT On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > Okay, I may be misusing terminology here, but it was never the > intention that all sumtcita (with the possible exception of those > in BAI) should be strictly equivalent with fi'o + brivla.

Whether it was intentional or not, the fact is that they are. Or are you saying that some sumtcita have some particularity that makes them unexpressible as "fi'o broda" (for some suitable broda)? One may dispute whether the chosen broda is precisely the correct one or not, but hardly the principle that it will be "fi'o broda" for some broda.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

bancus Posted by bancus on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 21:00 GMT posts: 52 On 11/6/07, Jorge Llambías wrote: > > No. Any word must have only one official definition. Anything else would > > be opening the door wide open for contradiction. > > And English has to be the language of official definitons of Lojban words?

FWIW, I certainly support that, ultimately, the official definitions of Lojban be *in* Lojban. After all, we're looking for cultural neutrality, are we not?

mu'o mi'e bancus

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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 21:00 GMT posts: 953 On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 12:49:04PM -0800, Theodore Reed wrote: > On 11/6/07, Jorge Llambías wrote: > > > No. Any word must have only one official definition. Anything else would > > > be opening the door wide open for contradiction. > > > > And English has to be the language of official definitons of Lojban words? > > FWIW, I certainly support that, ultimately, the official definitions > of Lojban be *in* Lojban. After all, we're looking for cultural > neutrality, are we not?

It seems that we have a volunteer for translating the sections that are already done into Lojban. :-)

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ Public Notice as Required by Law: Any Use of This Product, in Any Manner Whatsoever, Will Increase the Amount of Disorder in the Universe. Although No Liability Is Implied Herein, the Consumer Is Warned That This Process Will Ultimately Lead to the Heat Death of the Universe. --Susan Hewitt and Edward Subitzky


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

arj Posted by arj on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 21:15 GMT posts: 953 On Tue, Nov 06, 2007 at 05:46:11PM -0300, Jorge Llambías wrote: > On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > > > Okay, I may be misusing terminology here, but it was never the > > intention that all sumtcita (with the possible exception of those > > in BAI) should be strictly equivalent with fi'o + brivla. > > Whether it was intentional or not, the fact is that they are. Or are > you saying that some sumtcita have some particularity that makes > them unexpressible as "fi'o broda" (for some suitable broda)? One > may dispute whether the chosen broda is precisely the correct one > or not, but hardly the principle that it will be "fi'o broda" for some > broda.

I most certainly do dispute that.

What about composite tenses? What about ZA? What about VEhA? What about KI?

It will take some quite intricate machinery to make a rigorous equivalence between brivla and the imaginary journey model, and frankly I don't see the point.

-- Arnt Richard Johansen http://arj.nvg.org/ Public Notice as Required by Law: Any Use of This Product, in Any Manner Whatsoever, Will Increase the Amount of Disorder in the Universe. Although No Liability Is Implied Herein, the Consumer Is Warned That This Process Will Ultimately Lead to the Heat Death of the Universe. --Susan Hewitt and Edward Subitzky


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by Anonymous on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 22:38 GMT On 11/6/07, Arnt Richard Johansen wrote: > > One > > may dispute whether the chosen broda is precisely the correct one > > or not, but hardly the principle that it will be "fi'o broda" for some > > broda. > > I most certainly do dispute that. > > What about composite tenses? What about ZA? What about VEhA?

What about them? "ve'a" is something like "fi'o canlu" and "va" something like "fi'o tersei" (those are the ones I used in jbovlaste, but they can certainly be improved). For "puzu" we need a selbri that means "x1 happened long before x2", and so on. Of course for long compounds it may be hard to come up with a good selbri, but nobody is proposing to define every possible compound anyway (obviously).

> What about KI?

I'll grant you that one, because it does have a special function not included in "fi'o" or any selbri. The other special one, "cu'e", on the other hand is easy: "fi'o mo".

> It will take some quite intricate machinery to make a rigorous > equivalence between brivla and the imaginary journey model, and > frankly I don't see the point.

And nobody is proposing to do that.

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by lojbab on Tue 06 of Nov., 2007 23:38 GMT posts: 162 Jorge Llambas wrote: >>It will take some quite intricate machinery to make a rigorous >>equivalence between brivla and the imaginary journey model, and >>frankly I don't see the point. > > > And nobody is proposing to do that. > > mu'o mi'e xorxes

Actually, you are, if there is strict equivalence between the fi'o selbri and the cmavo.

We interpret a series of tense cmavo according to the imaginary journey model.

We have no semantic rules for interpreting a collection of fi'o modals which are by implication adding new sumti into the predication based on their order. fi'o modals currently are order-independent; tense cmavo are not. Perhaps the imaginary journey model itself can be translated into predications, but we are not obliged to solve that problem because the existing paradigm is good enough for people to understand and use the language even if it may be lacking in the sort of logical rigour that exact equivalences may suggest.

lojbab

Posted by Anonymous on Wed 07 of Nov., 2007 00:20 GMT On 11/6/07, Robert LeChevalier wrote: > Jorge Llambías wrote: > >>It will take some quite intricate machinery to make a rigorous > >>equivalence between brivla and the imaginary journey model, and > >>frankly I don't see the point. > > > > And nobody is proposing to do that. > > Actually, you are, if there is strict equivalence between the fi'o > selbri and the cmavo.

Dictionary definitions are never strict equivalences. You can't figure out the composite meanings of compound tags out of the English definitions of the components either. In any case, the "fi'o broda" definition will be much closer than anything in English.

> We interpret a series of tense cmavo according to the imaginary journey > model.

Yes.

> We have no semantic rules for interpreting a collection of fi'o modals > which are by implication adding new sumti into the predication based on > their order. fi'o modals currently are order-independent; tense cmavo > are not.

That doesn't matter for the purposes of defining each sumtcita as a "fi'o broda". It might well be that for compound sumtcita, the corresponding selbri is not a simple function of the selbri corresponding to the components. That doesn't mean that the compound sumtcita doesn't have a correspondig selbri too.

> Perhaps the imaginary journey model itself can be translated > into predications, but we are not obliged to solve that problem because > the existing paradigm is good enough for people to understand and use > the language even if it may be lacking in the sort of logical rigour > that exact equivalences may suggest.

And nobody is working on that harder problem anyway (at least for now).

mu'o mi'e xorxes


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BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Posted by JohnCowan on Wed 07 of Nov., 2007 00:51 GMT posts: 149 Jorge Llambías scripsit:

> That doesn't matter for the purposes of defining each sumtcita as a > "fi'o broda". It might well be that for compound sumtcita, the corresponding > selbri is not a simple function of the selbri corresponding to the > components. That doesn't mean that the compound sumtcita doesn't > have a correspondig selbri too.

+1

-- Possession is said to be nine points of the law, John Cowan but that's not saying how many points the law might have. cowan@ccil.org --Thomas A. Cowan (law professor and my father)

Posted by arj on Sun 04 of Nov., 2007 12:09 GMT posts: 953 > Use this thread to discuss the page:: BPFK Section: sumtcita Formants

Why does the table in this overlap with other BPFK sections? The columns for se, te, etc. are empty for the lower half of the table. What is then the point in establishing a brivla equivalent for these sumtcita?