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le la vei,on ckafyzda srinuntroci xipa
- To: John Cowan <cowan@snark.thyrsus.com>
- Subject: le la vei,on ckafyzda srinuntroci xipa
- From: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!ctr.columbia.edu!shoulson>
- In-Reply-To: VILVA%VIIKKI21.HELSINKI.FI@CUVMB.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU's message of Mon, 31 Aug 1992 02:34:45 -0500
- Reply-To: "Mark E. Shoulson" <cbmvax!uunet!ctr.columbia.edu!shoulson>
- Sender: Lojban list <cbmvax!uunet!pucc.princeton.edu!LOJBAN>
>Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1992 02:34:45 -0500
>From: VILVA%VIIKKI21.HELSINKI.FI@CUVMB.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU
>X-To: lojban@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu
>>Date: Sat, 29 Aug 1992 23:25:18 -0400
>>From: "Mark E. Shoulson" <shoulson@CTR.COLUMBIA.EDU>
>>In-reply-to: CJ FINE's message of Fri, 28 Aug 1992 16:34:30 BST
[ ... ]
>>Those work. I'm not dead-set on changing what's there, since that
>>works well for me also, but if we really wanted to avoid selbri-less
>>jufra (which I think are to be avoided in general, though not
>>necessarily to the point of fanaticism),
> I agree. I think in belles-lettres we'll have to flex a little bit.
Yes.
[ ... ]
>>>>>.i mi ca ze'upu.oi na'e sumne da
>>>>I'm always a little fuzzy with tenses... "I now (a-long-time-
>>>>interval past)"..? Oh, "it's now a long time that..." Hrrrm. I
>>>>let John >>>Cowan be the judge of that, if he gets a free moment.
>>> Was built along the lines indicated in 'Imaginary journeys'
>>Yes, tense probably works. Though I've been thinking that {na'e}
>>might not be the right negator. "I was other-than-a-smeller-of it1
>>(the smell of coffee)" --- well what were you of it, then? Maybe an
>>emitter? {na'e} usually implies negation to somewhere else on the
>>scale, but there's not much of a scale in {sumne}. Really what
>>you're saying is that the relationship of {sumne} didn't hold for you
>>and {da} (in whatever tense). You smelled other things, and {da} was
>>smelled by others, and you had other relations with {da} (you thought
>>about {da} perhaps), but that particular relationship didn't hold.
>>That's precisely the sort of negation provided by {na}, if I remember
>>the negation paper properly. I think {na} might be a better negator
>>here. Any other notions? Is {na'e} really better?
> The tense was the reason I used {na'e}. If you put in {na} and
> export it to the prenex you get:
>naku zo'u mi ca ze'upu sumne da
> which isn't the meaning I want (?). Now afterwards reading the
> negation paper, I think I ought to have had {nai} instead of
> {na'e}:
I dunno. It looks to me like that *is* the sense you're trying to get
across. But you're right, though: the {nai} is definitely better.
>>>>.i mi pensi.a'e loi selpinxe ckafi.au
>>>>Thinking about drunk coffee? Maybe. I might be thinking about {le
>>>>nu pinxe loi ckafi} or {le nu ckafi pinxe} or something, but not
>>>>likely about a mass of drunk-type coffee.
>>>
>>> Wanted to have a mass of beverage-type coffee, not the event of
>>> drinking. The time for that comes later, after contemplating the
>>> stuff.
>>
>>I dunno. I may have the wrong mental image of {pinxe}.
>>
>>~mark, tea-drinker.
>Now about {loi selpinxe ckafi}. Does it bring to mind the beverage or
>the coffee beans/powder the beverage is made of? I had the beverage
>in mind and I want to have the gismu {ckafi} in a position where I
>can tack the attitudinal on it. Well, now I have it : {loi selpinxe
>co ckafi.au}. What do you think? Better? Or was it you just couldn't
>imagine someone thinking more the beverage than the actual act of
>drinking? Many a time have I been sitting and enjoying the fragrant
>smell of tea, this being an essential part of the total enjoyment
>when the tea isn't just something nondescript. Same goes for coffee.
>There are brews and BREWS. And think of the Japanese tea seremony,
>to take an extreme example. In the seremony the act of drinking is
>really almost superfluous.
I think the problem is that I was interpreting {pinxe} wrongly, or at least
too narrowly. I didn't take {se pinxe} as "beverage", but rather as "thing
drunk", if you see the distinction. Hmm. You may not. That is, I was
considering {loi selpinxe ckafi} as (probably) expanding to {loi ckafi poi
selpinxe} --> {loi ckafi poi zo'e pinxe ke'a}: coffee which is drunk. This
isn't quite the same as "beverage coffee", and I couldn't figure out why
you were thinking about drunk coffee, sliding down someone's throat.
Your interpretation is likely more correct than mine.
>------------------------------------------------
~mark