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Re: terminators
>>>>> "Ivan" == Ivan A Derzhanski <iad@MATH.ACAD.BG> writes:
Ivan> It is also not a good example because _suo3yi3_ does not
Ivan> terminate the construction; it simply introduces the second
Ivan> part.
Yes, you're right.
>> For examples of terminators, how about postpositional
>> languages, such as Korean and Japanese? Aren't the
>> postpositions terminators by themselves?
Ivan> No. A terminator is a (frequently optional) right bracket
Ivan> that matches a required left bracket. If a postposition is
Ivan> a right bracket, what is the left?
That's implicit -- analoguous the elided terminators in Lojban. You
don't need brackets in postfix (reverse Polish) or prefix (Polish)
notations, do you?
So, take this Japanese sentence as an example:
koko_ni hon_ga ari_masu.
Explicit: here at book ) exist present)
Implicit: (( (
The positions of the left parenthesis are understood.
--
Lee Sau Dan 'u&u40(Big5) ~{@nJX6X~}(HZ)
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