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  • *Lojban Status: Primitives (gismu), 'Little Words' (cmavo), Grammar, Textbook and Teaching Aids, MEX, Revised Schedule Introductory Grammar Pronunciation
    130 KB (20,488 words) - 14:51, 23 March 2014
  • the English in Lojban? Probably, since the English *states* my
    552 KB (90,146 words) - 09:40, 26 January 2015
  • Mini Grammar Lessons: On du; On cu; On ke; On ti, ta, tu vs. vi, va, vu; On po'e, po, pe ...lth of possible forms of poetry that exist in the world's literature. Most English poetry is dominated by a single form, end-rhyme, in which the final word of
    168 KB (28,688 words) - 00:50, 13 August 2020
  • ...age available roughly since about 1979-80, when the original Loglan books (grammar-L1, and dictionary- L4/5) were sufficiently outdated to no longer serve as ...e are significant changes to each, and TL7/1 does not contain the complete grammar as did NB1, in the detail needed to actively work with the language. There
    125 KB (19,562 words) - 14:47, 23 March 2014
  • ...s for draft text- book lessons, draft cmavo lists, and the draft machine grammar from the prices included in the last issue. We are going to a 2-page order ...oes make his whole effort rather worthless, since a language with a secret grammar is uninteresting and unusable. </br>The most serious criticism of JCB's sci
    136 KB (22,126 words) - 00:45, 12 August 2020
  • Research and Development - Lojban Parser Status, Grammar Changes Proposed, serve the user as a resource book on the grammar, morphology, and usages of the
    109 KB (18,457 words) - 15:43, 19 July 2014
  • ...inal form, it will contain an account of what usage thinks the meaning and grammar is of the relevent cmavo. It will not be based on the current baseline. I w ...ine, it is undeniably part of the language, rather like "ain't" in certain English dialects. "ka'enai" seems to have the same meaning as the crunchier "na'eka
    99 KB (16,218 words) - 06:41, 23 July 2014
  • ...lish, these sounds (and ''/th/'', ''/zh/'', ''/sh/'') are pronounced as in English. lh a sound English doesn't have, made by pressing your tongue against the roof of your mouth,
    192 KB (30,893 words) - 08:45, 6 February 2015
  • diminished, since some unmarked cases of opaque contexts remain (mainly where English subject speakers just need to overcome their sloppy English (etc.) prejudices and move over to what is
    632 KB (109,363 words) - 09:54, 26 January 2015
  • ...use the phrase “negating a sentence” to mean changing its truth value. An English sentence may always be negated by prefixing ...ve. This point will be made clear in particular cases as needed. The other English meanings are supported by different Lojban connective constructs.
    140 KB (20,484 words) - 08:17, 1 July 2014
  • ...rd, being based on the English pronunciation of a word that's a fu'ivla in English. I had {boijmemai}, which should be {boljmemai}. ...s] on Mon 07 of July, 2008 13:56 GMT posts: 92</div><div>Any reason to use English style chapter enumeration (e.g., "-1-") rather than the Lojbanic {no'o mo'o
    284 KB (49,283 words) - 18:36, 30 April 2015
  • "America" (that's English "America", not Spanish). It's the sound that Double vowels are rare. Two examples are ''ii'', which is pronounced like English "ye" (as in "Oh
    99 KB (16,833 words) - 09:59, 12 May 2017
  • ...ttempt to answer all questions of the form “How do I say such-and-such (an English tense) in Lojban?” Instead, it explores the Lojban tense system from the ...ubtleties based on what they mean rather than on how they act similarly to English tenses. This chapter concentrates on presenting an intuitive approach to th
    150 KB (21,989 words) - 06:50, 26 December 2017
  • grammar; it should just be a list of words for symbols that the speakers can handle Does SU go back to the last NIhO, LU, TUhE, or TO (as grammar.300 claims) or the beginning of input (as the Red Book claims)?
    473 KB (72,506 words) - 06:31, 15 January 2016
  • 08:01 <@tsani> (the second premise is evidenced in the formal grammar) If you just read the English, your mind is likely to autocorrect the scope, causing you to miss the prob
    151 KB (25,533 words) - 13:19, 10 October 2023
  • ...o try to bring this subset of Lojban, and this trick of applying it to the English language, more fully into conscious & public awareness. ...an even Toki Pona, but because those words are used only to color & flavor English text, you can begin speaking with complete fluency from the first day, usin
    111 KB (19,522 words) - 18:01, 6 October 2014
  • ...by Antoine Arnauld and Claude Lancelot. It proposes a notion of universal grammar shared by all languages and determined by the nature of rational thought as * English mathematician [[George Boole]] publishes ''The Laws of Thought'', a follow-
    95 KB (14,323 words) - 10:38, 9 June 2020
  • ...individual word of the vocabulary. By contrast, the Lojban vocabulary and grammar and all language le'avla; (a few cmavo have the grammar of a brivla);
    73 KB (12,184 words) - 15:41, 19 July 2014
  • ...Oooh!”, “Arrgh!”, “Ugh!”, and “Yecch!” in the title. These are part of the English language; people born to other languages use a different set; yet you won't ...indicators”, or just “attitudinals”. This rule seems awkward and clunky to English-speakers at first, but is an essential part of the Lojbanic way of doing th
    95 KB (15,305 words) - 08:18, 1 July 2014
  • [On a Standard English reading: "I don't know that the mud wasn't deep".] ...straight out of Li & Thompson's ''Mandarin Chinese: A Functional Reference Grammar'', and as such may be presumed sound. Randy LaPolla says that even subject
    90 KB (15,149 words) - 06:55, 23 July 2014

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