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Re: ago24 & replies
pc:
> (I assume that Griecan pragmatics is not the Freudian psychology of lin-
> guistics, but that that some possible turns of phrase cannot be
> explained to carry some meanings).
Could you have another go at saying that? I didn't understand.
> Finally, some of the shifts seem just pointless, if not counter-
> productive. Some of the above may be of that sort, but the shift
> of _lo_broda_ from "all broda" to "some broda," both of which are
> redundant for Qda poi constructions and much less efficient in
> that role, strikes me as an especially clear case of change for
> change sake and without regard to further consequences.
What used {lo broda} to mean, or what should it mean if it were not
redundant with Q da poi?
> Some Notes on Related Threads
> 1. I see _xo'u_ is still alive.
It is barely alive, being savaged by Jorge's incisive assaults and
supported only by my feeble advocacy.
> Good! The move to the heqad of the highest prenex is simply the
> simplest rule and the one that seems to be involved most often
> in natural languages
What the **** is a heqad? It looks Arabic, & hasn't made it into the
OED (1st ed).
> Some of the comments on _xo'u_ seem to be
> more appropriate to whatever it is that marks terms in opaque
> contexts that can shine through the opacity and be taken to have
> external reference.
Why shouldn't {xohu} fulfil this function?
> 3. The thing And wants for this sibling problem, one from column
> A and one from column J is a Cartesian product, for which we once
> had a cmavo in JOI, though I cannot now lex it.
Can anyone elaborate on this for my benefit? The problem is how to
say "mothers of fathers of Jorge and And" (such that J & A are not
siblings) without expanding to {lo mamta be lo patfu be J beho beho
e lo mamta be lo patfu be A}.
> 5. If we are to have lambda variable, we need a slough of them,
> since the whole point of lambdacism is that different ones can be
> replaced differently. In particular, _lo ka kea mamta kea_ is
> not the mother relation but the self-mother relation (one that
> rarely holds except for the odd goddess), since _kea_ must be
> replaced by the same term in all its occurrences on each applica-
> tion.
To the severely limited extent that I understand this, it seems to me
that (a) you could solve the need for a slough (a slew?) by subscripting,
and (b) something other than {keha} should be used, since in relative
clauses {keha} appears to behave very differently (though I daren't
venture to attempt to say how).
---
And