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Re: Quantifiers
la dilyn cusku di'e
> This has some slightly odd consequences, though I'm not sure how to
> work them with the grammar. But I believe
>
> pa lu'a le xunre cukta .e le blabi cukta .e le blanu cukta
> cu cpana le jubme
>
> means
> Exactly one of the red book, the white book, and the blue book
> is on the table
>
> Yes?
Preferably not joined with {.e} but with {joi} or {ce}.
To me, what you have means "one element of the red book, the white book,
and the blue book".
Not very meaningful because it is not clear what are the elements of a
book, perhaps a common page. But if you had sets there instead of
books, I would understand it as an element of the intersection. (You
can use {ku'a} for this as well.)
The point is that {joi} and {ce} make the overall sumti a mass or a set,
while {.e} doesn't, so an element of things joined with {.e} is still an
element of the things themselves, not of the overall thing.
Jorge