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Jorge Llambias scripsit: > How can lo'e cinfo inhabit but not be captured. > Or maybe it can be captured, but not by one person? That sounds plausible. The typical California condor was captured, for example; the typical Przewalski's wild horse is in captivity but has not been captured. > Can the typical lion be captured? And if it can, by whom? Well, let's suppose that there are lion-capturers. (I have no idea, really.) If so, then it would be fair to say that the typical lion-capturer captures the typical captured lion. We haven't talked about sentences with two lo'e instances before, AFAIK. > Also, would you say something like this makes sense with > your {lo'e}: > > le friko cu se xabju so'i xanto e lo'e cinfo > Africa is inhabited by many elephants and by the typical lion. I have no problem with it, since sentences with ".e" are defined by expanding to two sentences. > I think we can agree that that one is {lo fadni be fi lo'i cinfo}. Good. > >mi nitcu pa le tanxe selcmi poi seltisna lei cukta > > Do you mean {pa lu'a le tanxe selcmi}? Yes. I wrote "lu'a le'i" and then changed "le'i" to "le", inadvertently removing "lu'a" as well. > Also, do you really mean that {lei cukta cu tisna le selcmi}? Granted that "tisna" might make them too heavy to carry, why not? > I will still have to ask, which set of boxes are you talking > about? And are you sure there is one and only one member > of that set such that you need that box and no other? How > do I identify the one box, once I've somehow managed to > identify the set? "lu'a" means "a member, some member". As long as it belongs to the right set, I don't care which box I get. -- My confusion is rapidly waxing John Cowan For XML Schema's too taxing: jcowan@hidden.email I'd use DTDs http://www.reutershealth.com If they had local trees -- http://www.ccil.org/~cowan I think I best switch to RELAX NG.