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Re: TECH(?): can everyone write impeccably grammatical Lojban?
Ivan:
> > Date: Fri, 25 Sep 1992 15:21:50 +0100
> > From: And Rosta <ucleaar@UCL>
> >
> > Mark:
> > > {zoi .gy. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs .gy.} is
> > > grammatical Lojban, but then "He said, 'Ani holech l'beit ha-sefer.'" is
> > > grammatical English, and equally unhelpful in getting accross the
> > > import of what's quoted.
> >
> > But "He said 'What you name is'" would all get processed by the English
> > speaking hearer, even tho the quote needn't be grammatical or English.
> >
> > My point is that although computers might most likely skip zoi stuff,
> > I think people wouldn't.
>
> Ahh. That is, there is such a thing as ungrammatical_but_meaningful
> English, but not ungrammatical_but_meaningful Lojban?
>
> That may be a point.
> > And. Atsor
> .iVAN. .iksnajred.
This is what I was getting at. Obviously most of the Lojban written
at the mo is in practise ungrammatical but nevertheless communicative
but in principle I suppose the technical lojbo line is that if it's
ungrammatical then it's not Lojban.
As Ivan no doubt knows better than me, the distinction is sometimes
(usually? always?) made between a *parser* and (don't know the
technical comput ling term) a *grammaticality tester*.
A grammaticality tester looks at a sentence & if it's grammatical
gives you its structure(s), or, if it's ungrammatical just tells
youtopiss off.
By contrast, a parser strives tocome up with ananalysis whatever the
input.
My ignorant & half-baked impression ofLojban isthat it isconstrcted
for a Grammaticality Tester & not for a Parser. So basically if you
elide one terminator too many or whatever you've had it.
---
And