Lojban In General

Lojban In General


posts: 324

Take, for example, the word "activations". It consists of a root, "act", three
derivational suffixes "ive", "ate", and "tion", and an inflectional
suffix "s". The root and derivational suffixes together are called the stem.

By this terminology the word "nuntolcadgau" has a root "cadgau", two
derivational prefixes, and no inflectional affixes (such morphemes don't
exist in Lojban).

The only natlang roots I know of that seem like gismu to me are the Semitic
roots, which generally, like Lojban gismu, have three consonants, and their
Afro-Asiatic kin. I call them smegi'u. Unlike Lojban gismu, they do not make
lots of compound words.

Pierre


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posts: 47

> Take, for example, the word "activations". It consists of a root, "act",
> three
> derivational suffixes "ive", "ate", and "tion", and an inflectional
> suffix "s". The root and derivational suffixes together are called the
> stem.
>
> By this terminology the word "nuntolcadgau" has a root "cadgau", two
> derivational prefixes, and no inflectional affixes (such morphemes don't
> exist in Lojban).


I agree it makes sense to consider -nun- and -tol- derivational affixes,
but wouldn't {cadgau} be a compound of two roots, rather than a root?

--
Daniel Brockman
daniel@brockman.se

posts: 324

On Monday 06 October 2008 16:01:21 Daniel Brockman wrote:
> I agree it makes sense to consider -nun- and -tol- derivational affixes,
> but wouldn't {cadgau} be a compound of two roots, rather than a root?

Yes it is two roots. I've been thinking about roots and {gismu}, and there
does seem to be some sense in calling natlang roots {gismu}. Take the
Indo-European root for instance. It consists generally of some consonants,
none of which are the same, and a vowel "e" somewhere among the consonants.
The e-grade, o-grade, and zero-grade forms could be said to be its rafsi. Its
relation and argument roles are those of the simplest verb formed from the
root, if any; if it's a noun or adjective, there is one argument role.

Lojban has a sharp distinction between the native roots, which can form
compounds by running together their rafsi as long as the phonotactics allow,
and borrowed roots, which have to be separated at least by "y" from adjacent
morphemes (or "'" for those that begin with a vowel) (if the general rafsi
fu'ivla proposals are accepted) and otherwise by {zei}. But they are both
roots, as far as linguistic terminology goes. So what can we call something
that's either a gismu or a fu'ivla, but is not a lujvo, and may be in a
language other than Lojban?

Pierre


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