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Re: Autoconversion of goi???
- To: lojban-list
- Subject: Re: Autoconversion of goi???
- From: cowan (John Cowan)
- Date: Tue, 14 May 91 14:38:48 EDT
- In-Reply-To: <9105131539.AA04162@luna.math.ucla.edu>; from "math.ucla.edu!jimc" at May 13, 91 8:39 am
la djim. kartr. cusku di'e:
> I see here "le nanla goi ko'a" where the main phrase is the antecedent of
> the anaphor, and also "ko'e goi lo velcnemu..." where the anaphor is
> the main phrase. Is this really allowed? For humans speaking normally
> it is fairly easy to distinguish the anaphor from its newly assigned
> antecedent, but to nail down the difference in all possible circumstances
> may be more difficult.
> If "goi" may be used to "also-known-as" a pair of non-anaphor sumti,
> you have two interpretations of "A goi B": one analogous to the anaphor
> case in which one sumti is primary and the other is a symbol or
> abbreviation for it, and another where A and B are alternative
> specifications of the same referent set each of which can stand on its
> own. That's commutative whereas the first interpretation is not.
Grammatically, "A goi B" is legal where A and B may be any sumti.
Semantically, though, either A or B should be a pro-sumti. (The word
"anaphor" has too many problems when the thing "anaphorized" actually
follows, and saying "anaphor/cataphor" is just too awkward for me.)
The whole purpose of "goi" (and its selbri analogue, "cei") is pro-sumti
(viz. pro-bridi) assignment, and use where either A or B is not a pro-sumti
is of doubtful meaning.
The general case should use "no'u", which is the non-restrictive appositional
phrase marker and means "which incidentally is".
--
cowan@snark.thyrsus.com ...!uunet!cbmvax!snark!cowan
e'osai ko sarji la lojban