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Re: BEGINNER'S QUESTION: internal sumti



Nick Summers <nsummers@hutch.com.au> writes:

> ...         ta cu tavla be do bei le melbi ku be'o vecnu
> ...
> The translation offered for this bridi in the grammar is:
>
> "That is a talker-to-you-about-the-beautiful-thing(s) salesperson.
> (or, more simply)
> That's a salesperson who talks to you about beautiful things."

I think your diagram (not reproduced above) is just fine, plus the
inferences you have drawn from it.  My only disagreement is that I
would tend to interpret "Y vecnu" as a salesperson who sells Ys,
because "vecnu" is transitive in an essential way.  (That's not a
Lojban concept.)  Thus: "X is a salesman of sweet-talking dolls".

You are correct that "le vecnu" means salesperson (or salesdroid or
whatever) by itself.  (Also, "le se vecnu" = the goods for sale; "le te
vecnu" = the buyer; "le ve vecnu" = the low, low price.)  You use tanru
to jazz up the predicate (for example to give a teaching example of an
over-complicated tanru where the modifying element has arguments stuck
on).  There are only about 1400 gismu, and they cover semantic space
too coarsely for the nuances of meaning often desired.

The tanru relation is deliberately unspecified (more unspecified than
I feel comfortable with, by the way.)  Speakers are expected to invent
tanru; there is not. and probably never will be, any official list.

The modifying element is identified as having explicit arguments
because "be" links the first one to it alone (no ambiguity what item
"be" is linking the arg to.)  The end of the unit is marked by "be'o",
which often can be elided, but in this case it can't.  The element
isn't "almost clausal", it IS clausal (bridi), and would have been
clausal even without the arguments.  "blari'o" is a lujvo, which is
related to a tanru, but the rules for interpreting it semantically are
a bit more structured.  There is a chapter in the grammar about that.

As for "who...", I like to think of it like this: a bridi expresses a
relation between all of its arguments, even if some are not explicitly
designated by words.  Thus there must be one or more specific persons
who did get, or will get, sweet-talking dolls sold to them, at one or
more specific prices, even though the sentence does not identify them.
There is the philosophical argument: a self-proclaimed poet never
writes any poems; does he truly qualify for that predicate?  I'm not
going to try to answer that one.  Also note, with modal cases ^H^H^H^H^H
arguments included, every predicate potentially has infinitely many
arguments, which complicates any analysis.  Let the philosophers rage!

A "bridi" is a "selbri" (bare predicate) with its arguments (sumti).
A "sumti" is (omitting one or two specializations) a special kind of
bridi with determiners ("le" etc.) and other stuff stuck on.
A selbri can have a variety of forms, the most common of which consists
of a gismu (primitive predicate word) or a lujvo and zero or more tanru
modifying elements, which themselves are bridi (suitably endmarked in
the complicated cases).

In computer science terminology, a selbri is like a function.  X1,
X2... are its formal parameters.  Sumti are its actual parameters.  In
a sumti, X1 is left open, and becomes the functions' value; whereas a
bridi is a boolean expression (true or false depending on the specific
sumti).  Generally a bridi or sumti represents an ensemble of referents.

It is important for the beginner to pay attention to self-creating
tanru and lujvo, because the gismu are intended to form a "basis" of
semantic space, but only combinations can cover it completely (so we
hope).  ---- But you certainly can say a lot just with the gismu.

As a beginner you have shown a surprising grasp of what's going on.
I hope you will continue in Lojban.

James F. Carter        Voice 310 825 2897       FAX 310 206 6673
UCLA-Mathnet;  6115 MSA; 405 Hilgard Ave.; Los Angeles, CA, USA  90095-1555
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