19.6. Subscripts: XI

The following cmavo is discussed in this section:

xi

XI

subscript

The cmavo xi (of selma'o XI) indicates that a subscript (a number, a lerfu string, or a parenthesized mekso) follows. Subscripts can be attached to almost any construction and are placed following the construction (or its terminator word, which is generally required). They are useful either to extend the finite cmavo list to infinite length, or to make more refined distinctions than the standard cmavo list permits. The remainder of this section mentions some places where subscripts might naturally be used.

Lojban gismu have at most five places:

Example 19.24. 

mi cu klama   le zarci   le zdani   le dargu   le karce
I   go to the market from the house via the road using the car.

Consequently, selma'o SE (which operates on a selbri to change the order of its places) and selma'o FA (which provides place number tags for individual sumti) have only enough members to handle up to five places. Conversion of Example 19.24, using xe to swap the x1 and x5 places, would produce:

Example 19.25. 

le karce cu xe-klama   le zarci
The car   is-a-transportation-means to the market
  le zdani   le dargu   mi
from the house via the road for me.

And reordering of the place structures might produce:

Example 19.26. 

fo le dargu fi le zdani fa mi
Via the road, from the house, I,
fe le zarci fu le karce cu klama
to the market, using the car, go.

Example 19.24 to Example 19.26 all mean the same thing. But consider the lujvo nunkla, formed by applying the abstraction operator nu to klama:

Example 19.27. 

la'e di'u cu nunkla   mi
The-referent-of the-previous-sentence is-an-event-of-going by me
  le zarci   le zdani   le dargu   le karce
to the market from the house via the road using the car.

Example 19.27 shows that nunkla has six places: the five places of klama plus a new one (placed first) for the event itself. Performing transformations similar to that of Example 19.25 requires an additional conversion cmavo that exchanges the x1 and x6 places. The solution is to use any cmavo of SE with a subscript "6" (Section 19.6):

Example 19.28. 

le karce cu sexixa nunkla   mi
The car is-a-transportation-means-in-the-event-of-going by me
  le zarci   le zdani
to the market from the house
  le dargu la'edi'u
via the road is-an-event-which-is-referred-to-by-the-last-sentence.

Likewise, a sixth place tag can be created by using any cmavo of FA with a subscript:

Example 19.29. 

fu le dargu fo le zdani fe mi
Via the road, from the house, by me,
fa la'edi'u
  is-an-event-which is-referred-to-by-the-last-sentence,
fi le zarci faxixa le karce cu nunkla
to the market, using the car, is-an-event-of-going.

Example 19.27 to Example 19.29 also all mean the same thing, and each is derived straightforwardly from any of the others, despite the tortured nature of the English glosses. In addition, any other member of SE or FA could be substituted into sexixa and faxixa without change of meaning: vexixa means the same thing as sexixa.

Lojban provides two groups of pro-sumti, both belonging to selma'o KOhA. The ko'a-series cmavo are used to refer to explicitly specified sumti to which they have been bound using goi. The da-series, on the other hand, are existentially or universally quantified variables. (These concepts are explained more fully in Chapter 16.) There are ten ko'a-series cmavo and 3 da-series cmavo available.

If more are required, any cmavo of the ko'a-series or the da-series can be subscripted:

Example 19.30. 

da xi vo
X sub 4

is the 4th bound variable of the 1st sequence of the da-series, and

Example 19.31. 

ko'i xi paso
something-3 sub 18

is the 18th free variable of the 3rd sequence of the ko'a-series. This convention allows 10 sequences of ko'a-type pro-sumti and 3 sequences of da-type pro-sumti, each with as many members as needed. Note that daxivo and dexivo are considered to be distinct pro-sumti, unlike the situation with sexixa and vexixa above. Exactly similar treatment can be given to the bu'a-series of selma'o GOhA and to the gismu pro-bridi broda, brode, brodi, brodo, and brodu.

Subscripts on lerfu words are used in the standard mathematical way to extend the number of variables:

Example 19.32. 

li xy.boixipa du li xy.boixire su'i xy.boixici
The-number x-sub-1 equals the-number x-sub-2 plus x-sub-3
x1 = x2 + x3

and can be used to extend the number of pro-sumti as well, since lerfu strings outside mathematical contexts are grammatically and semantically equivalent to pro-sumti of the ko'a-series. (In Example 19.32, note the required terminator boi after each xy. cmavo; this terminator allows the subscript to be attached without ambiguity.)

Names, which are similar to pro-sumti, can also be subscripted to distinguish two individuals with the same name:

Example 19.33. 

la djan. xipa cusku lu mi'enai do li'u la djan. xire
John 1 expresses [quote] I-am-not you [unquote] to John 2 .

Subscripts on tenses allow talking about more than one time or place that is described by the same general cmavo. For example, puxipa could refer to one point in the past, and puxire a second point (earlier or later).

You can place a subscript on the word ja'a, the bridi affirmative of selma'o NA, to express so-called fuzzy truths. The usual machinery for fuzzy logic (statements whose truth value is not merely true or false, but is expressed by a number in the range 0 to 1) in Lojban is the abstractor jei:

Example 19.34. 

li pimu jei mi ganra
The-number .5 is-the-truth-value-of my being-broad.

However, by convention we can attach a subscript to ja'a to indicate fuzzy truth (or to na if we change the amount):

Example 19.35. 

mi ja'a xipimu ganra
I truly sub-.5 am-broad

Finally, as mentioned in Section 19.2, ni'o and no'i cmavo with matching subscripts mark the start and the continuation of a given topic respectively. Different topics can be assigned to different subscripts.

Other uses of subscripts will doubtless be devised in future.