gismu != primitives: Difference between revisions

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This represents one of the classic Lojban fallacies, and even [[JCB|James Cooke Brown]] believed it for a time.


This represents one of the classic Lojban fallacies, and even [[jbocre: James Cooke Brown CB|James Cooke Brown CB]] believed it for a time.
There is nothing inherently "primitive" about most of the [[gismu]], nor are they intended to be so.  As an obvious example, '''mamta''' means ''female parent'', and could have been represented as '''ninmu je rirni'''.  But it isn't, because it is a sufficiently high-frequency concept that assigning a [[gismu|gismu]] for it made sense even in the [[Elder Days]].
 
There is nothing inherently "primitive" about most of the gismu, nor are they intended to be so.  As an obvious example, ''nanmu'' means "male human", and could have been represented as "nakni je remna".  But it isn't, because it is a sufficiently high-frequency concept that assigning a [[gismu|gismu]] for it made sense even in the [[jbocre: Elder Days|Elder Days]].

Latest revision as of 06:25, 6 September 2015

This represents one of the classic Lojban fallacies, and even James Cooke Brown believed it for a time.

There is nothing inherently "primitive" about most of the gismu, nor are they intended to be so. As an obvious example, mamta means female parent, and could have been represented as ninmu je rirni. But it isn't, because it is a sufficiently high-frequency concept that assigning a gismu for it made sense even in the Elder Days.