Last updated 1/95 Lojban (/LOZH-bahn/) is a constructed language. Originally called "Loglan" by project founder Dr. James Cooke Brown, who started the language development in 1955, the language goals were first described in the article "Loglan" in Scientific American, June, 1960. Loglan/Lojban has been built over three decades by dozens of workers and hundreds of supporters, led since 1987 by The Logical Language Group. There are many artificial languages, but Loglan/Lojban has been engi- neered to make it unique in several ways. The following are the main fea- tures of Lojban: o Lojban is designed to be used by people in communication with each other, and possibly in the future with computers. o Lojban is designed to be culturally neutral. o Lojban grammar is based on the principles of logic. o Lojban has an unambiguous grammar. o Lojban has phonetic spelling, and unambiguous resolution of sounds into words. o Lojban is simple compared to natural languages; it is easy to learn. o Lojban's 1300 root words can be easily combined to form a vocabulary of millions of words. o Lojban is regular; the rules of the language are without exception. o Lojban attempts to remove restrictions on creative and clear thought and communication. o Lojban has a variety of uses, ranging from the creative to the scien- tific, from the theoretical to the practical. Why was Lojban developed? - Lojban was originally designed for the pur- pose of supporting research on a concept known as the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis: "the structure of a language constrains the thinking of people using that language". Lojban allows the full expressive capability of a natural lan- guage, but differs in structure from other languages in major ways. This al- lows its use as a test vehicle for scientists studying the relationships be- tween language, thought, and culture. Other uses for Lojban - Lojban was designed as a human language, and not as a computer language. It is therefore intended for use in conversation, reading, writing, and thinking. However, since Lojban can be processed by a computer much more easily than can a natural language, Lojban-based computer applications are a natural expectation. Due to its unambiguous grammar and simple structure, it can be easily parsed by computers, making it possible for Lojban to be used in the future for computer-human interaction, and per- haps conversation. Lojban's predicate structure is similar to AI programming languages (especially PROLOG), suggesting it as a powerful tool in AI proc- essing, especially in the storing and processing of data about the world and people's conceptions of it. Linguists are interested in Lojban's potential as an intermediate language in computer-aided translation of natural lan- guages. Other people are interested in Lojban as an international language. The Lojban design - Lojban's character set uses only standard keyboard keys; capitalization is rare; punctuation is spoken as words. Written lan- guage corresponds exactly to the sounds of the spoken language; spelling is phonetic and unambiguous, and the flowing sounds of the language break down uniquely into words, whose structure give information about grammar and mean- ing. These features make computer speech recognition and transcription more practical. Learning to write and spell Lojban is trivial. Lojban's predicate grammar was derived from that of formal logic. Loj- ban sentences are stated as sets of arguments tied together by predicates. These predicate structures can be used to express 'non-logical' thought; lo- gicians are able to analyze all manner of verbal expressions by converting them into predicate notation. But while Lojban will already be expressed in a predicate-based system, allowing easy logical analysis, it also contains the wide variety of elements found in natural language for expression of at- titudes, emotions, and rich metaphor. Lojban has none of the standard parts of speech. Lojban's 'predicate words' can serve as the equivalent of a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb. Action and existence are equally accessible to a speaker; the distinction can be ignored, or can be explicitly expressed. A variety of operators deal with abstractions such as events, states, properties, amounts, ideas, experience, and truth, and with at least four pre-defined varieties of causality. Lojban has no mandatory inflections and declensions on nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Natural languages evolved such variations to reduce ambiguity as to how words are related in a sentence. Evolutionary development made these inflections and declensions highly irregular and thus difficult to learn. The simple but flexible predicate relationship erases both the irregularity and the declensions. Tense and location markers (inflections), adverbs, and prepositions are combined into one part of speech. New preposition-like forms can be built at will from predicates; these allow the user to expand upon a sentence by at- taching and relating clauses not normally implied in the meaning of a word. Numbers and quantifiers are conceptually expanded from natural lan- guages. "Many", "enough", "too much", "a few", and "at least" are among con- cepts that are expressed as numbers in Lojban. Core concepts of logic, math- ematics, and science are built into the root vocabulary and grammar. On top of the core concepts of predicate logic, Lojban adds in non-logical con- structs that do not affect or obscure the logical structure, allowing commu- nications that are not amenable to logical analysis. For example, Lojban has a full set of emotional indicators, similar to such interjections in English as "Oh!", "Aha!", and "Wheee!", except that each has a specific meaning. Similarly, Lojban has indicators of the speaker's relationship to what is said, similar to those found in some American Indian languages. Lojban supports metalinguistic discussion about the sentences being spo- ken while remaining unambiguous. Lojban also supports a 'tense' logic that allows extreme specificity of time and space relationships, even those im- plied by time travel. Lojban's grammar is designed to support unambiguous statement of mathematical expressions and relations in a manner compatible both with international usage and Lojban's non-mathematical grammar. Lojban's content words were derived algorithmically from words or word-parts having similar meaning, chosen from the 6 languages most widely spoken throughout the world, using recent speaker population estimates. Those source languages were (in order by population weight) Chinese, English, Hindi, Spanish, Russian, and Arabic. A larger set of languages was considered but rejected because the algorithm chosen did no effectively benefit from their inclusion. Possible words were formed by matching sounds from the source words occuring in the same order as in the trial Lojban word, and scored using population-based weights. The highest scoring word was generally chosen, after allowing for collisions with words formed for other meanings. The intended benefit of this algorithmic method was to create words containing familiar sound-sequences, and memory hooks to a variety of languages to ease memorization of the words, while still forming a distinct vocabulary that would stand on its own. This would avoid too much transfer of cultural connotations, as often occurs when a second language has a word similar in both sound and meaning to the source language. Research is being conducted to determine whether the word-making algorithm, or a similar algorithm, is actually helpful in learning vocabulary. If so, then Lojban has supported its twin goals of maximum learnability and cultural independence. Lojban is much simpler than natural languages. Its grammar is compara- ble in complexity with the current generation of computer languages (such as ADA). Lojban's pronunciation, spelling, word formation, and grammar rules are fixed, and the language is free of exceptions to these rules. Current status and usage - The language, then called "Loglan", was first described in the 1950's, by Dr. James Cooke Brown. The 1960 Scientific American article "Loglan" was his call for assistance in developing the lan- guage. A revolution in linguistics was simultaneously taking place; the re- sulting increase in knowledge of the nature of language changed the require- ments for Loglan. The first widely distributed Loglan dictionary and lan- guage description did not appear until 1975; this description was incomplete, and continued development work discouraged learning the language. Computers caught up with Loglan just then, making it possible to refine the grammar, eliminate ambiguity and mathematically prove its absence; this work has just been completed. For over 40 years, this work has been performed by volun- teers, and without financial support. Now, after several versions of the language, people are learning and using the current version, which is the first called "Lojban" (from the roots "logical-language" in Lojban). This version is the first version with a stable vocabulary, and the first to have a stable and completely defined grammar (the grammar of mathe- matical expressions, for example, was not developed until 1990). The basic Lojban vocabulary was baselined (stabilized against change) in the last half of 1988, and the grammar similarly stabilized in late-1990, after completion of the first Lojban courses, actual usage of the language, and several itera- tions of careful analysis. Thus, while the language was first started 40 years ago, Loglan/Lojban is a very new language. To ensure Lojban remains stable while people learn it, the language def- inition is prescribed and closely controlled. When the number of speakers has grown significantly, and a Lojban literature has developed, Lojban will be treated like a natural language and allowed to grow and flourish without con- straint, as do other natural languages. Original text and poetry has been written in Lojban, and some has been translated into the language. Lojban's powerful metaphor structure allows building new concepts into words easily, as needed. A Lojban speaker doesn't need a dictionary to use and understand millions of words that can poten- tially exist in the language. There are over 1000 people on our printed mailing lists, including about 120 listed as actively trying to learn the language. On the computer nets, our World Wide Web (WWW) site has been visited by a few thousand people in its first 6 months of existence, and around 100 people subscribe to the ac- tive Listserv mailing list ôLojban Listö which includes discussion in both Lojban and English, ranging from beginner level to technical aspects of lin- guistics and logic. Discussions on Lojban List recently have included native speakers of several languages including languages from at least 3 language families. A few dozen people have demonstrated communicative ability to use the language in conversation, translation, or original writing, although none are yet demonstrated to be fluent (one speaker has demonstrated near-fluency beyond the capability of others to keep up with him). Several people regu- larly get together in the Washington DC area for conversation sessions, and an annual meeting/mini-convention is held there in summer. This progress is remarkable since there is yet no dictionary for the current language (a draft English-Lojban dictionary file was recently placed on our ftp site, but is still very preliminary), a textbook being written exists only in partial draft form, and papers that will eventually comprise a detailed reference grammar remain in draft form; we've evolved methods of teaching the language at a distance that overcome this handicap. Lojban's unambiguity - Lojban has an unambiguous grammar (proven by com- puter analysis of a formal grammar with the computer tool YACC), pronuncia- tion, and morphology (word forms). The person who reads or hears a Lojban sentence is never in doubt as to what words it contains or what roles they play in the sentence. Lojban has no words that sound alike but have differ- ent meanings (like "herd" and "heard"), that have multiple unrelated meanings ("set"), or that differ only in punctuation but not in sound (like the abomi- nable "its" and "it's"). There is never any doubt about where words begin and end ("cargo shipment" can be heard as 2, 3, or 4 words). The function of each word is clear; there is nothing like the English "Time flies like an ar- row.", in which any of the first three words could be the verb. Precision in no way confines the meaning of a Lojban sentence. It is possible to speak nonsense, to tell a lie, or to be misunderstood. You can be very specific, or you can be intentionally vague. Your hearer may not understand what you meant, but will always understand what you said. Lojban is NOT entirely unambiguous; human beings occasionally desire to be ambiguous in their expressions. In Lojban, this ambiguity is limited to semantics, metaphor, and intentional omission of information (ellipsis). Se- mantic ambiguity in language results because words in natural languages rep- resent families of concepts rather than individual meanings, often with only weak semantic relationships to each other. In addition, each individual's personal experiences provide emotional connotations to words. By providing a fresh, culturally-neutral start, Lojban attempts to minimize the transference of these associations as people learn the language. By intention, most Loj- ban words do not closely resemble corresponding words in other languages; the differences aid in making this fresh start possible. Lojban's powerful meta- phor and word-building features make it easy to make fine distinctions be- tween concepts, discouraging individual words from having families of mean- ings. Lojban metaphors are themselves ambiguous, specifying a relationship between concepts, but not what the relationship is. That relationship can be made explicit using unambiguous logical constructs if necessary, or can be left vague as the speaker (usually) desires. Similarly, portions of the log- ical structure of a Lojban expression can be omitted, greatly simplifying the expression while causing some ambiguity. Unlike in the natural languages, though, this ambiguity is readily identified by a reader or listener. Thus all ambiguity in Lojban is constrained and recognizable, and can be clarified as necessary by further interaction. Lojban and Sapir-Whorf - One formulation of this hypothesis states that the structure of a language constrains thought in that language, and con- strains and influences the culture that uses it. In other words, if concepts or structural patterns are difficult to express in a language, the society and culture using the language will tend to avoid them. Individuals might overcome this barrier, but the society as a whole will not. The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is important, and controversial; it can be used as a sociological argument to justify or to oppose racism and sexism (and a variety of other 'isms'). For example, the assertion that since genderless expressions in English use 'masculine' forms, English is 'sexist' and promotes discrimina- tion against women, presumes the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is true. Understand- ing the potential for Sapir-Whorf effects could lead to better inter-cultural understanding, promoting communication and peace. It is known that people's ideas and thought change somewhat when they learn a foreign language. It is not known whether this change is due to ex- posure to a different culture or even just getting outside of ones own cul- ture. It is also not known how much (if any) of the change is due to the na- ture of the language, as opposed to the cultural associations. The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis was important in linguistics in the 1950's, but interest fell off partially because properly testing it was so difficult. Loglan/Lojban is a new approach to such testing. Obviously, if a culture-in- dependent language could be taught to groups of people, the effects of lan- guage could more easily be separated from those of culture. Unique features of Lojban remove constraints on language in the areas of logic, ambiguity, and expressive power, opening up areas of thought that have not been easily accessible by human language before. Meanwhile, the formal rigidity of the language definition allows speakers to carefully control their expressions (and perhaps therefore their thought processes). This gives some measure of predictive power that can be used in designing and pre- paring for actual Sapir-Whorf experiments. One of the prerequisites of a Sapir-Whorf experiment is an international body of Lojban speakers. We need to be able to teach Lojban to subjects who know only their native (non-English) tongue, and we need to know in advance the difficulties that people from each language and culture will have in learning Lojban. Thus, the Lojban community is actively reaching out to speakers of languages other than English. Lojban does not need to prove or disprove the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis in order to be successful. However, if evidence is produced supporting the Sa- pir-Whorf effect, Lojban will likely be perceived as an outstanding tool of analytical and creative thought. Other linguistic applications - An artificial language is a simple model of a natural language. It is used for communication like natural languages, simpler, more regular, and relatively uncontaminated by culture effects. Un- like most natural languages, an AL has not evolved through naturally proc- esses of internal change or contact with other languages. In addition, to the extent to which details of an AL is pre-defined, the internal structure of the language is far better known than that of any natural language. Such a pre-definition, a language 'prescription', makes an AL a unique tool for studying the nature of language. As people learn the language, the way they 'acquire' understanding of that prescription can tell scientists how 'natural' the prescribed forms are. Actual usage of the language can be com- pared to the prescription providing quantitative data on specific patterns of usage. As the language evolves from its relatively pristine initial state, it may deviate from its prescription. Such deviations will better inform re- searchers as to the properties of a 'natural' language. The process of lan- guage change itself will be open to investigation in a way never before pos- sible. Finally, the existence of a relatively complete language prescription at the birth of the language means that a 'description' of actual usage after that initial state can be more simply created, maintained, and studied. Lojban is undoubtedly the most carefully designed and defined AL ever created. All aspects of its design have been carefully engineered by several people encompassing expertise in a variety of disciplines, including linguis- tics. The language prescription is similarly the most complete of any lan- guage (even with its documentation yet incomplete). As such, it serves as a unique basis for the study of language usage and language change. A new language like Lojban has no native speakers. As the language evolves, native speakers of other languages will learn it, and will bring into their Lojban usage the perspective and patterns of their native language. This interaction process affects all languages, and may be a principal cause of language change. As Lojban is learned by speakers of a variety of natural languages, this process can be studied directly in a way never before possible, with the language prescription serving as a standard by which deviations associated with speaker origin, and evolution of usage, can be measured and described in detail. An AL like Lojban has neither an associated 'native accent' nor a cul- ture base. Being much simpler and more regular than a natural language, an adult speaker should acquire a fluency seldom achieved when studying a natu- ral language, and in a relatively short time. Lojban thus makes possible relatively short-term studies of language learning and language change. Pro- cesses that take generations in natural languages may be observed in a few years in Lojban speakers. With the learning of other languages acquiring critical importance in today's international economy, Lojban provides a tool for research in lan- guage acquisition. Again, Lojban's simplicity allows the results of such re- search to be obtained more quickly than in similar studies of natural lan- guage acquisition. No claim is made that studying Lojban will tell 'all' about language. Lojban, at least for several decades, will only be a 'model' of a language, whose 'naturalness' will be suspect. However, to the extent that Lojban serves the communicative and expressive functions of human language, any the- ory about the nature of human language must apply to Lojban. Language fea- tures and processes more easily identified in studying Lojban can then be confirmed in natural languages. Similarly, theories of the nature of lan- guage can be tested and refined against this simpler model of a language be- fore facing the more difficult and time-consuming testing and analysis in- volved in natural language research. Because Lojban is relatively culture-free, and because of its prescribed structure that is consistent with predicate logic, Lojban is an ideal medium for the analysis and description of other languages. Currently, features in language must be compared against other natural languages, and are usually described in scientific literature by glossed translation into English. Loj- ban is simple and regular enough to be acquired as a metalanguage for de- scribing other languages; its structures allow clearer reflection of the pat- terns of the language being described, without interference from the compet- ing patterns of English. Finally, Lojban's predicate grammar makes it eminently suited for ongo- ing computer research into natural languages. Lojban can be used for parsing and analysis, as an internal medium of data storage, or as an intermediate language for machine translation. Having a combination of logical and natu- ral language structures, Lojban combines the best of both major structural approaches to language processing in computers. The exercise of trying to invent a language can teach us things about language that probably can't be learned in any other way. Even if Lojban should fail as a language, we will learn. However, to the extent Lojban suc- ceeds, its potential as a basis for testing ideas about language, its struc- ture, and usage, is unlimited. The invention of Lojban is the invention of the science of experimental linguistics. Lojban as an international language - Lojban may be the first artificial language NOT in direct competition with Esperanto, in that Lojban's potential success is not dependent on its immediate practical use as an international language. Indeed, we hope to use Esperanto as a means of rapidly spreading information about Lojban to non-English speakers, speeding a process that would take decades using direct translation to all target languages. Lojban has proven attractive to Esperantists interested in acquiring a new perspec- tive on their own international language; these feel less threatened because Lojban has different goals. Lojban's supporters recognize that it will take decades for Lojban to acquire both the number and variety of speakers and the extensive history of usage that marks Esperanto culture. Meanwhile, each language community has much to learn from each other; this process has started and is most active. Several reasons for learning Lojban NOW - Those working with the lan- guage now are actively consulted for their opinions on the language design, and on how to teach and spread the language. People have joined the project leadership within a few months of becoming involved. Those writing in the language now have the chance to mark the language in ways unseen in English since Chaucer and Shakespeare. Those with a computer background can lead development of the first com- puter applications for the language. Expertise in the language will no doubt be valuable as Lojban becomes recognized as a useful tool for computer appli- cations by the computer industry. Computer-oriented Lojbanists can also aid in developing computer-aided instruction tools or converting existing soft- ware to run on new computers. Regardless of background, learning Lojban is a mind-expanding experi- ence. Learning any language other than your native tongue broadens your per- spectives and allows you to transcend the limited viewpoints of your native language culture. Lojban, being much simpler to learn than natural lan- guages, provides this benefit much more quickly than does the study of other languages. Being so strongly different, the intensity of the effect seems to be heightened. When Lojbanists talk about language, the discussion has been observed to be more sophisticated as well as qualitatively different from the talk of students of second natural languages. The logical organization embedded in Lojban aids in organizing and clar- ifying thoughts. Having done so, your new perspective on language, ambigu- ity, and communication will allow you to express those thoughts more clearly, even when you use an ambiguous natural language. A relatively short study of Lojban by high school (or younger) students has been proposed, providing the linguistic understanding that was once asso- ciated with studying Latin and other languages for much longer periods of time. Such study can be tied in with concepts of logic, and possibly with computer-related activities, helping to show the essential interrelated na- ture of language and other human endeavor. You needn't learn Lojban for any practical purpose, however. Many of those learning Lojban are doing so because it is fun. Learning Lojban is in- tellectually stimulating, and provides human interaction and mental chal- lenge. Lojban has all the benefits of games designed for entertainment, with the added prospect of developing useful skills as a side benefit. Learning Lojban as an 'intellectual toy' means that you can get enjoyment from learn- ing Lojban without nearly the effort needed to benefit from studying other languages. While becoming fluent in Lojban will probably take hundreds of hours over several months, you can feel some sense of accomplishment in the language after just a few hours of study. You can use Lojban immediately for fun, while gaining skill with greater experience. How to learn Lojban - For printed materials, write to The Logical Lan- guage Group, Inc. at the address found at the end of this brochure, and we will be happy to provide them. We request a contribution of $5 to cover the costs of these materials, but will send this package on speculation. Addi- tional materials available total hundreds of pages, which are priced approxi- mately at our costs; we are a non-profit educational/scientific organization. Contact us regarding international payment; we offer several options. A lim- ited policy exists for providing materials to people who cannot afford payment. We also have electronic versions of most of our materials. Over 12 megabytes of such materials, including complete archives of Lojban List and a variety of Lojban text are available from our WWW site, accessible at: http://www.lojban.org. All Lojban language definition materials are explicitly placed in the public domain, with most language descriptions available with liberal copying per- missions. We encourage new people to concentrate on vocabulary. Almost any use of Lojban requires some mastery of the basic vocabulary (1000-2000 words), al- though people have written interesting texts while having mastered only a few hundred words. You can learn enough Lojban grammar to support conversation in just a couple of hours, but face many hours of vocabulary work in order to effectively use that grammar. We distribute flash cards and have developed flash card techniques that are extremely efficient in learning vocabulary. These techniques have been automated into computer-aided-teaching programs sold under the name "LogFlash", with MS-DOS and MacIntosh versions currently available. You can learn the Lojban grammar in several ways, including study of ex- amples in the journal "ju'i lobypli" or by inspection and analysis of YACC and E-BNF formal grammar descriptions. Draft lesson materials (about 280 pages) are the best materials available for self-study. A Lojban textbook will be written to reflect what was learned from the first learning efforts, and is being designed so that it can be used for self-instruction, class- room teaching, or group study. A formal 'Lojban reference dictionary' is be- ing prepared to replace most of the existing word lists and language descrip- tion materials, but present materials contain the equivalent of a basic dic- tionary (20000 English entries in one draft file) - it is intended to publish this dictionary during 1995. A Lojban reference grammar is being written, providing details of grammar and usage along with many examples. Most people studying the language use the draft textbook lessons and the draft reference grammar papers (available electronically only), with considerable success. Approximately 6 months after the three books: dictionary, reference grammar, and textbook, have been published, the Lojban language definition will be baselined (frozen) for 5 years, and Lojban will thereafter be solely controlled by speakers of the language. Contact: Bob LeChevalier The Logical Language Group, Inc. 2904 Beau Lane Fairfax, VA 22031 (703) 385-0273 lojbab@lojban.org Subscribe to Lojban List by sending a null message to: lojban-subscribe@onelist.com and send mailings to all newsgroup members via: lojban@onelist.com Our WWW home page is at: http://xiron.pc.helsinki.fi/lojban/ Compuserve members can join this group, or can contact us, by preceding any of the above addresses with ">INTERNET:". Fidonet connects with the Internet via a variety of nodes - contact your SYSOP.