Auto-hóa: Difference between revisions

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'''Relative pronoun ellipsis'''<ref group=note>I vacillated between different formulations of the title of this article, but in the end decided that this is the most ‘correct’ version (while also being vaguely friendly). ~uakci</ref>, also known as '''{{t|hóa}} elision''' or just '''auto-{{t|hóa}}''', is the “study” of interpreting omission of the relative pronoun {{t|hóa}} in a {{tone|3}} relative clause phrase.
'''Resumptive pronoun ellipsis'''<ref group=note>I vacillated between different formulations of the title of this article, but in the end decided that this is the most ‘correct’ version (while also being vaguely friendly). ~uakci</ref>, also known as '''auto-{{t|hóa}}''' (or '''{{t|hóa}}-elision''') relates to the appearance of relative clauses which do not use {{t|hóa}} or any other pronoun to refer to their heads, such  as the relative clause in {{t|sa pỏq nïe kúa}}. A resumptive pronoun ellipsis rule is a rule which assigns meanings to these otherwise meaningless clauses, usually by specifying a spot where a covert {{t|hóa}} appears automatically.


== Scary English words ==
== Scary English words ==

Revision as of 11:53, 23 September 2021

Resumptive pronoun ellipsis[note 1], also known as auto-hóa (or hóa-elision) relates to the appearance of relative clauses which do not use hóa or any other pronoun to refer to their heads, such as the relative clause in sa pỏq nïe kúa. A resumptive pronoun ellipsis rule is a rule which assigns meanings to these otherwise meaningless clauses, usually by specifying a spot where a covert hóa appears automatically.

Scary English words

  • Ellipsis (think of the ellipsis symbol, …) is the act of omitting part of a phrase, or a whole phrase, with the expectation that pragmatics and context will convey the missing phrase. Some kinds of ellipsis are solidifed into grammatical rules: She went to the store but I didn’t (…go to the store). (Note that another analysis of this kind of ellipsis interprets didn’t as a so-called pro-verb – like a pronoun but for verb phrases. This interpretation is outside of the purview of this article.)
  • Elision technically refers to the act of removing single or multiple sounds (for example, it would /ɪt ˈwʊd/ → it’d /ɪtəd/ → /ɪd/), but in loglang communities, the term has taken on the meaning of the disposure of unneeded particles (such as Lojban’s elision of terminators – kinds of closing bracket particles – which allows one to say lo jbobau cu xamgu rather than lo jbobau ku cu xamgu vau iau).
  • Broadly speaking, a relative clause is a dependent clause which introduces additional information about another entity – for example, in he was the person I wanted to find, I wanted to find is a relative clause of the person (it describes what kind of person). In this scenario, the person is termed the head or the antecedent of the relative clause.
  • A relative pronoun is one which refers to the antecedent. Such are hard to find in English, but they appear on occasion: a child who knows I love them (them = a child. Also note that a child is implicitly the subject of the relative clause – the one who knows). All Toaq relative clauses are formulated in a way that makes the relative pronoun hóa easy to use – for example, ‘a child who is big’ = deo säo hóa (literally child such that it is big). Other pronouns may be used as antecedents since the antecedent pronouns update: deo säo , where is the animate pronoun (he/she/they/it, for humans and animals performing roles thereof).
  • Consequently, relative pronoun ellipsis occurs when hóa is omitted for one reason or another.

The battle of auto-hóa

Right after an avant-garde rap performance by nuogaı, fagri/Hoaqgıo posted a taxonomy of viable hóa elision proposals. They are enumerated as follows:

The Auto-Hóa Suite, by Hoaqgıo (2020-02-02)

  1. Required hóa.
    hóa must appear in every relative clause.
  2. Semi-required hóa.
    hóa must appear in every relative clause, unless that clause is completely empty, in which case hóa fills the first slot.
  3. Lazy initial auto-hóa.
    If hóa does not appear in the relative clause at all, then it is inserted before all of the other arguments.
  4. Eager initial auto-hóa.
    hóa is inserted before all of the other arguments even if it does appear elsewhere in the clause, and can only be cancelled with an explicit .[note 2]
  5. Lazy structural final auto-hóa.
    If hóa does not appear in the relative clause at all, then it is inserted after all of the other arguments at the top level.
  6. Eager structural final auto-hóa.
    A hóa is inserted after all of the other arguments at the top-level unless the top-level slots are all filled.
  7. Lazy pre-terminator final auto-hóa.
    If a hóa does not appear in the relative clauese at all, it is inserted as an automatic final word in the phrase (e.g., after explicit terminators but before implicit ones).
  8. Eager pre-terminator final auto-hóa.
    hóa is inserted as an automatic final word in the phrase (e.g., after explicit terminators but before implicit ones) unless the phrase is full.
  9. Hybrid hóa.
    The constructs , , lủ, and räı could have different rules of hóa. For example, eager initial auto-hóa in häo clauses together with semi-required hóa in / clauses has been suggested (the auto-hóa form for would then be ke häo).

The Auto-Hóa Suite by Hoemaı (2020-05-31)

TODO

uakcitalk’s anti-compromise auto-hóa (2021-09-20)

TODO(uakcitalk)

The Auto-Hóa Matrix (derivative gruël by yours truly uakcitalk; 2021-09-23)

The comprehensive list as presented above exhausts the sensible possibilities for hóa filling; however, given the medium of HTML, we can do one better and arrange the lazy–eager distinction across a matrix:

implicature-free diehards lazy (overridable) eager (forcible)
required semi-required initial
(hóa then arguments)
lazy initial eager initial
final structural final
(arguments then hóa)
lazy structural-final initial eager structural-final initial
pre-terminator final
(possibly nested terms then hóa)
lazy pre-terminator-final initial eager pre-terminator-final initial
hybrid (different rules for räı … hóa, lu … hóa, râı … ja) →

And this table gives examples ( meanıng ‘turns into’):


fä hóa
hóa fä á úhóa á ú
fä á hóa(no change)
fä á úhóa á ú
fä á hóahóa á hóa
fä fı á hóa(no change)
fä â úfä â ú na hóa
fä â ú hóa(no change)
fä â úfä â ú na hóa
fä â ú hóafä â ú hóa na hóa
fä á ú í(no change; full)
düa jí gîdüa jí gî hóa
söq jí gî ja na hóa(no change)
düa jí gîdüa jí gî hóa
söq jí gî ja(invalid; is full)
söq jí gî ja nasöq jí gî ja na hóa
(for example, say, räq jíräq hóa, but lü dua jílü dua jí hóa)

Discussion

TODO: poignant summary owo

References


Notes

  1. I vacillated between different formulations of the title of this article, but in the end decided that this is the most ‘correct’ version (while also being vaguely friendly). ~uakci
  2. 2.0 2.1 Since place structure tags are no longer an official feature since the release of Toaq γ.