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I was thinking about this, and I think I've used it before, but isn't {ka} on the same footing as {du'u} in that it always designates the only member of a singleton set? {ka} gives you a propositional function, where {du'u} gives you a proposition, so though there's any number of possible propositions for the selkai, the function itself is the one and only function which is described by whatever is to the right of the {ka}. Is this correct? (then if so, the result is that we should always use {le} (or {lo'e} for some, but I still don't understand that fully) with {ka}, like {du'u}). (The thing that brought this up is that I was using abstractor connectives---I wanted le'e nu and le ka. Since the gadri are different I got to thinking about this. (I ended up having the gadri for {nu} "take precedence" in the connected thing (as le'e nujeka), justified by the gadri for {ka} being essentially only syntactic since it is always {le})). -- Jordan DeLong - fracture@hidden.email lu zo'o loi censa bakni cu terzba le zaltapla poi xagrai li'u sei la mark. tuen. cusku
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