Zhang is the most purple out of Zhang, Ranjeet, Jyoti and
Susan. (Literally, "Zhang is superlative in purpleness
among..." You would normally use a lujvo — in this case ziryrai 'purplest' — to cut the sentence down to a manageable
size: la jan. ziryrai la jan. ce la ranjit. ce la djiotis.
ce la suzyn..) Also, Zhang either dances better than Ranjeet, or
drunk (at that time). (Or: when he's not drunk.) (Literally, again, the Lojban gives more
detail: "Zhang exceeds Ranjeet in the amount by which he is expert
at dancing." And here, too, you can use a lujvo to make the sentence somewhat
simpler: .i la jan.
cremau la ranjit. lenu dansu, from
certu zmadu 'more expert'.) Susan brings Jyoti a beer, and Zhang a soda. (Or soft
drink, or pop, or coke, or cordial, or lolly water — whatever your local word for
carbonated beverages is.) Zhang quickly (whether or not willingly) drinks the soda.
(Remember that gu'u sutra gi
djica means the same as sutra ju djica: it is the willingness,
rather than the quickness, that is irrelevant.) Ranjeet says "Don't you think you'll eventually want
some hot, freshly-brewed coffee?" (As the punctuation in the English
shows, the Lojban words for freshly-brewed —
literally the more prosaic 'newly constructed'
— go together. If the bo was not there, Ranjeet would be saying
something like the coffee being novel in that it is hot
({hot [kind of] new} made
coffee); perhaps the establishment doesn't normally
have much of a water heating process, so any actual hot coffee would be a sensation.) Zhang says "New skin? Huh? My current skin
is head-to-foot beautiful!" (Zhang has misheard Ranjeet over the
thumping music, not to mention the buzz in his own head. As this shows, you can use
non-logical connectives to join together selbri as well as sumti: from head to
toe snuck inside a tanru is as good a place as any for
it.) Ranjeet shouts "Coffee!" Zhang looks confusedly, and afterwards (then) laughs and
says "No, silly! I'm drinking soda!" (Ranjeet's exclamation
can also be interpreted as an observative — "Look!
Coffee!", especially to a mind as addled as Zhang's.) Note: Just like .i,
gi'e can be followed by a
tense to indicate when the second term happened relative to the first term.
If gi'e means 'and', then gi'e ba
bo means 'and later', or 'and then'. We saw someting similar with gi ca
bo above. But bo still binds immediately to what went
before it. So if we left things as they were, we would be saying something
like "Zhang looks confusedly and then laughs. He also says..."
In that case, it wouldn't necessarily be clear that he spoke
after he stared at Ranjeet, dumbstruck: since logical AND says
nothing about the time when things happen, that sentence would still be true even if Zhang had made his
perceptive remark three days earlier. What we want is for the
and later to apply to both
him laughing and him talking. To force this to happen, we use the bracket
ke instead of bo (ke can also take tense): "Zhang {stares},
and then {laughs and says 'No,
silly...'}" You might also want to refer to p. 364 of The Complete Lojban Language.
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