The Complete Lojban Language (1997)/Chapter 20

The following paragraphs list all the selma'o of Lojban, with a brief explanation of what each one is about, and reference to the chapter number where each is explained more fully. As usual, all selma'o names are given in capital letters (with “h” serving as the capital of “'”) and are the names of a representative cmavo, often the most important or the first in alphabetical order. One example is given of each selma'o: for selma'o which have several uses, the most common use is shown.

selma'o A (Chapter 14)
Specifies a logical connection (e.g. “and”, “or”, “if”), usually between sumti. la djan. .a la djein. klama le zarci John and/or Jane goes to the store. Also used to create vowel lerfu words when followed with “bu”.

selma'o BAI (Chapter 9)
May be prefixed to a sumti to specify an additional place, not otherwise present in the place structure of the selbri, and derived from a single place of some other selbri. mi tavla bau la lojban. I speak in-language Lojban.

selma'o BAhE (Chapter 19)
Emphasizes the next single word, or marks it as a nonce word (one invented for the occasion). la ba'e .djordj. klama le zarci George goes to the store. It is George who goes to the store.

selma'o BE (Chapter 5)
Attaches sumti which fill the place structure of a single unit making up a tanru. Unless otherwise indicated, the sumti fill the x2, x3, and successive places in that order. BE is most useful in descriptions formed with LE. See BEI, BEhO. mi klama be ta troci I am-a-(goer to-that) type-of-trier. I try to go to that place.

selma'o BEI (Chapter 5)
Separates multiple sumti attached by BE to a tanru unit. mi klama be le zarci bei le zdani be'o troci I am-a-(goer to-the store from-the home) type-of-trier. I try to go from the home to the market.

selma'o BEhO (Chapter 5)
Elidable terminator for BE. Terminates sumti that are attached to a tanru unit. mi klama be le zarci be'o troci I am-a-(goer to-the market) type-of-trier. I try to go to the market.

selma'o BIhE (Chapter 18)
Prefixed to a mathematical operator to mark it as higher priority than other mathematical operators, binding its operands more closely. li ci bi'e pi'u vo su'i mu du li paze The-number 3 [priority] times 4 plus 5 equals the-number 17. 3 × 4 + 5 = 17

selma'o BIhI (Chapter 14)
Joins sumti or tanru units (as well as some other things) to form intervals. See GAhO. mi ca sanli la drezdn. bi'i la frankfurt. I [present] stand-on-surface Dresden [interval] Frankfurt. I am standing between Dresden and Frankfurt.

selma'o BO (Chapter 5, Chapter 15, Chapter 18)
Joins tanru units, binding them together closely. Also used to bind logically or non-logically connected phrases, sentences, etc. BO is always high precedence and right-grouping. ta cmalu nixli bo ckule That is-a-small type-of (girl type-of school). That is a small school for girls.

selma'o BOI (Chapter 18)
Elidable terminator for PA or BY. Used to terminate a number (string of numeric cmavo) or lerfu string (string of letter words) when another string immediately follows. li re du li vu'u voboi re    The-number two equals the-number the-difference-of four-and two.

selma'o BU (Chapter 17)
A suffix which can be attached to any word, typically a word representing a letter of the alphabet or else a name, to make a word for a symbol or a different letter of the alphabet. In particular, attached to single-vowel cmavo to make words for vowel letters. .abu .ebu .ibu .obu .ubu .ybu a, e, i, o, u, y.

selma'o BY (Chapter 17)
Words representing the letters of the Lojban alphabet, plus various shift words which alter the interpretation of other letter words. Terminated by BOI. .abu tavla .by le la .ibymym. skami A talks-to B about-the of-IBM computers. A talks to B about IBM computers.

selma'o CAI (Chapter 13)
Indicates the intensity of an emotion: maximum, strong, weak, or not at all. Typically follows another particle which specifies the emotion. .ei cai mi klama le zarci [Obligation!] [Intense!] I go-to the market. I must go to the market.

selma'o CAhA (Chapter 10)
Specifies whether a bridi refers to an actual fact, a potential (achieved or not), or merely an innate capability. ro datka ka'e flulimna All ducks [capability] are-float-swimmers. All ducks have the capability of swimming by floating.

selma'o CEI (Chapter 7)
Assigns a selbri definition to one of the five pro-bridi gismu: “broda”, “brode”, “brodi”, “brodo”, or “brodu”, for later use. ti slasi je mlatu bo cidja lante gacri cei broda .i le crino broda cu barda .i le xunre broda cu cmalu This is a plastic cat-food can cover, or thingy. The green thingy is large. The red thingy is small.

selma'o CEhE (Chapter 14, Chapter 16)
Joins multiple terms into a termset. Termsets are used to associate several terms for logical connectives, for equal quantifier scope, or for special constructs in tenses. mi ce'e do pe'e je la djan. ce'e la djeimyz. cu pendo I [,] you [joint] and John [,] James are-friends-of. I am a friend of you, and John is a friend of James.

selma'o CO (Chapter 5)
When inserted between the components of a tanru, inverts it, so that the following tanru unit modifies the previous one. mi troci co klama le zarci le zdani I am-a-trier of-type (goer to-the market from-the house). I try to go to the market from the house.

selma'o COI (Chapter 6, Chapter 13)
When prefixed to a name, description, or sumti, produces a vocative: a phrase which indicates who is being spoken to (or who is speaking). Vocatives are used in conversational protocols, including greeting, farewell, and radio communication. Terminated by DOhU. See DOI. coi .djan. Greetings, John.

selma'o CU (Chapter 9)
Separates the selbri of a bridi from any sumti which precede it. Never strictly necessary, but often useful to eliminate various elidable terminators. le gerku cu klama le zarci The dog goes to-the store.

selma'o CUhE (Chapter 10)
Forms a question which asks when, where, or in what mode the rest of the bridi is true. See PU, CAhA, TAhE, and BAI. do cu'e klama le zarci You [When/Where?] go to-the store? When are you going to the store?

selma'o DAhO (Chapter 7)
Cancels the assigned significance of all sumti cmavo (of selma'o KOhA) and bridi cmavo (of selma'o GOhA).

selma'o DOI (Chapter 13)
The non-specific vocative indicator. May be used with or without COI. No pause is required between “doi” and a following name. See DOhU. doi frank. mi tavla do    O Frank, I speak-to you. Frank, I’m talking to you.

selma'o DOhU (Chapter 13)
Elidable terminator for COI or DOI. Signals the end of a vocative. coi do'u    Greetings [terminator] Greetings, O unspecified one!

selma'o FA (Chapter 9)
Prefix for a sumti, indicating which numbered place in the place structure the sumti belongs in; overrides word order. fa mi cu klama fi la .atlantas. fe la bastn. fo le dargu fu le karce x1= I go x3= Atlanta x2= Boston x4= the road x5= the car. I go from Atlanta to Boston via the road using the car.

selma'o FAhA (Chapter 10)
Specifies the direction in which, or toward which (when marked with MOhI) or along which (when prefixed by VEhA or VIhA) the action of the bridi takes place. le nanmu zu'a batci le gerku The man [left] bites the dog. To my left, the man bites the dog.

selma'o FAhO (Chapter 19)
A mechanical signal, outside the grammar, indicating that there is no more text. Useful in talking to computers.

selma'o FEhE (Chapter 10)
Indicates that the following interval modifier (using TAhE, ROI, or ZAhO) refers to space rather than time. ko vi'i fe'e di'i sombo le gurni You-imperative [1-dimensional] [space] [regularly] sow the grain. Sow the grain in a line and evenly!

selma'o FEhU (Chapter 9)
Elidable terminator for FIhO. Indicates the end of an ad hoc modal tag: the tagged sumti immediately follows. mi viska do fi'o kanla [fe'u] le zunle I see you [modal] eye: the left-thing I see you with the left eye.

selma'o FIhO (Chapter 9)
When placed before a selbri, transforms the selbri into a modal tag, grammatically and semantically equivalent to a member of selma'o BAI. Terminated by FEhU. mi viska do fi'o kanla le zunle I see you with eye the left-thing I see you with my left eye.

selma'o FOI (Chapter 17)
Signals the end of a compound alphabet letter word that begins with TEI. Not an elidable terminator. tei .ebu .akut. bu foi ( “e” “acute” ) the letter “e” with an acute accent

selma'o FUhA (Chapter 18)
Indicates that the following mathematical expression is to be interpreted as reverse Polish (RP), a mode in which mathematical operators follow their operands. li fu'a reboi re[boi] su'i du li vo    the-number [RP!] two, two, plus equals the-number four 2 + 2 = 4

selma'o FUhE (Chapter 19)
Indicates that the following indicator(s) of selma'o UI affect not the preceding word, as usual, but rather all following words until a FUhO. mi viska le fu'e .ia blanu zdani fu'o ponse I see the [start] [belief] blue house [end] possessor I see the owner of a blue house, or what I believe to be one.

selma'o FUhO (Chapter 19)
Cancels all indicators of selma'o UI which are in effect. mi viska le fu'e .ia blanu zdani fu'o ponse I see the [start] [belief] blue house [end] possessor. I see the owner of what I believe to be a blue house.

selma'o GA (Chapter 14)
Indicates the beginning of two logically connected sumti, bridi-tails, or various other things. Logical connections include “both ... and”, “either ... or”, “if ... then”, and so on. See GI. ga la djan. nanmu gi la djeimyz. ninmu Either John is a man or James is a woman (or both).

selma'o GAhO (Chapter 14)
Specifies whether an interval specified by BIhI includes or excludes its endpoints. Used in pairs before and after the BIhI cmavo, to specify the nature of both the left- and the right-hand endpoints. mi ca sanli la drezdn. ga'o bi'i ga'o la frankfurt. I [present] stand Dresden [inclusive] [interval] [inclusive] Frankfurt. I am standing between Dresden and Frankfurt, inclusive of both.

selma'o GEhU (Chapter 8)
Elidable terminator for GOI. Marks the end of a relative phrase. See KUhO. la djan. goi ko'a ge'u blanu John (referred to as it-1) is-blue.

selma'o GI (Chapter 14)
Separates two logically or non-logically connected sumti, tanru units, bridi-tails, or other things, when the prefix is a forethought connective involving GA, GUhA, or JOI. ge la djan. nanmu gi la djeimyz. ninmu (It is true that) both John is a man and James is a woman.

selma'o GIhA (Chapter 14)
Specifies a logical connective (e.g. “and”, “or”, “if”) between two bridi-tails: a bridi-tail is a selbri with any associated following sumti, but not including any preceding sumti. mi klama le zarci gi'e nelci la djan. I go-to the market and like John.

selma'o GOI (Chapter 8)
Specifies the beginning of a relative phrase, which associates a subordinate sumti (following) to another sumti (preceding). Terminated by GEhU See NOI. la djan. goi ko'a cu blanu John (referred to as it-1) is blue.

selma'o GOhA (Chapter 7)
A general selma'o for all cmavo which can take the place of brivla. There are several groups of these. A: mi klama le zarci B: mi go'i    A: I’m going to the market. B: Me, too.

selma'o GUhA (Chapter 14)
Indicates the beginning of two logically connected tanru units. Takes the place of GA when forming logically-connected tanru. See GI. la .alis. gu'e ricfu gi blanu Alice is both rich and blue.

selma'o I (Chapter 19)
Separates two sentences from each other. mi klama le zarci .i mi klama le zdani I go-to the market. I go-to the office.

selma'o JA (Chapter 14)
Specifies a logical connection (e.g. “and”, “or”, “if”) between two tanru units, mathematical operands, tenses, or abstractions. ti blanu je zdani This is-blue and a-house.

selma'o JAI (Chapter 9)
When followed by a tense or modal, creates a conversion operator attachable to a selbri which exchanges the modal place with the x1 place of the selbri. When alone, is a conversion operator exchanging the x1 place of the selbri (which should be an abstract sumti) with one of the places of the abstracted-over bridi. mi jai gau galfi le bitmu skari I am-the-actor-in modifying the wall color. I act so as to modify the wall color. I change the color of the wall.

selma'o JOI (Chapter 14)
Specifies a non-logical connection (e.g. together-with-as-mass, -set, or -sequence) between two sumti, tanru units, or various other things. When immediately followed by GI, provides forethought non-logical connection analogous to GA. la djan. joi la .alis. cu bevri le pipno John massed-with Alice carry the piano.

selma'o JOhI (Chapter 18)
Indicates that the following mathematical operands (a list terminated by TEhU) form a mathematical vector (one-dimensional array). li jo'i paboi reboi te'u su'i jo'i ciboi voboi du         li jo'i voboi xaboi The-number array( one, two ) plus array( three, four) equals the-number array (four, six). (1,2) + (3,4) = (4,6)

selma'o KE (Chapter 5)
Groups everything between itself and a following KEhE for purposes of logical connection, tanru construction, or other purposes. KE and KEhE are not used for mathematical (see VEI and VEhO) or discursive (see TO and TOI) purposes. ta ke melbi cmalu ke'e nixli ckule That is-a-( pretty little ) girl school. That is a school for girls who are pretty in their littleness.

selma'o KEI (Chapter 11)
Elidable terminator for NU. Marks the end of an abstraction bridi. la djan. cu nu sonci kei djica John is-an-(event-of being-a-soldier) type-of desirer. John wants to be a soldier.

selma'o KEhE (Chapter 5)
Elidable terminator for KE. Marks the end of a grouping. ta ke melbi cmalu ke'e nixli ckule That is-a-( pretty little ) girl school. That is a school for girls who are pretty in their littleness.

selma'o KI (Chapter 10)
When preceded by a tense or modal, makes it “sticky”, so that it applies to all further bridi until reset by another appearance of KI. When alone, eliminates all sticky tenses.

selma'o KOhA (Chapter 7)
A general selma'o which contains all cmavo which can substitute for sumti. These cmavo are divided into several groups. le blanu zdani goi ko'a cu barda .i ko'a na cmamau ti    The blue house (referred to as it-1) is big. It-1 is-not smaller-than this-thing.

selma'o KU (Chapter 6, Chapter 10)
Elidable terminator for LE and some uses of LA. Indicates the end of a description sumti. Also used after a tense or modal to indicate that no sumti follows, and in the compound NA+KU to indicate natural language-style negation. le prenu ku le zdani ku klama The person, to-the house, goes. The person goes to the house.

selma'o KUhE (Chapter 18)
Elidable terminator for PEhO: indicates the end of a forethought mathematical expression (one in which the operator precedes the operands). li pe'o su'i reboi reboi re[boi] ku'e du li xa    The number [forethought] the-sum-of two two two [end] equals the-number six.

selma'o KUhO (Chapter 8)
Elidable terminator for NOI. Indicates the end of a relative clause. le zdani poi blanu ku'o barda The house which is-blue is-big.

selma'o LA (Chapter 6)
Descriptors which change name words (or selbri) into sumti which identify people or things by name. Similar to LE. May be terminated with KU if followed by a description selbri. la kikeros. du la tulis. Cicero is Tully.

selma'o LAU (Chapter 17)
Combines with the following alphabetic letter to represent a single marker: change from lower to upper case, change of font, punctuation, etc.)    tau sy. .ibu     [single-shift] “s” “i”     Si (chemical symbol for silicon)

selma'o LAhE (Chapter 6)
Qualifiers which, when prefixed to a sumti, change it into another sumti with related meaning. Qualifiers can also consist of a cmavo from selma'o NAhE plus BO. Terminated by LUhU. mi viska la'e zoi kuot. A Tale of Two Cities .kuot I see that-represented-by the-text “A Tale of Two Cities”. I see the book “A Tale of Two Cities”.

selma'o LE (Chapter 6)
Descriptors which make selbri into sumti which describe or specify things that fit into the x1 place of the selbri. Terminated by KU. See LA. le gerku cu klama le zdani The dog goes-to the house.

selma'o LEhU (Chapter 19)
Indicates the end of a quotation begun with LOhU. Not an elidable terminator. lo'u mi du do du mi le'u cu na lojbo drani [quote] mi du do du mi [unquote] is-not Lojbanically correct. “mi du do du mi” is not correct Lojban.

selma'o LI (Chapter 18)
Descriptors which change numbers or other mathematical expressions into sumti which specify numbers or numerical expressions. Terminated by LOhO. li re su'u re na du li vo su'i vo    The-number 2 minus 2 not equals the-number 4 plus 4. 2 - 2 ≠ 4 + 4

selma'o LIhU (Chapter 19)
Elidable terminator for LU. Indicates the end of a text quotation. mi cusku lu mi klama le zarci li'u    I express [quote] I go-to the market [end quote].

selma'o LOhO (Chapter 18)
Elidable terminator for LI. Indicates the end of a mathematical expression used in a LI description. li vo lo'o li ci lo'o cu zmadu The-number 4 [end number], the number 3 [end number], is greater. 4 > 3

selma'o LOhU (Chapter 19)
Indicates the beginning of a quotation (a sumti) which is grammatical as long as the quoted material consists of Lojban words, whether they form a text or not. Terminated by LEhU. do cusku lo'u mi du do du ko'a le'u    You express [quote] mi du do du ko'a [end quote]. You said, “mi du do du ko'a”.

selma'o LU (Chapter 19)
Indicates the beginning of a quotation (a sumti) which is grammatical only if the quoted material also forms a grammatical Lojban text. Terminated by LIhU. mi cusku lu mi klama le zarci li'u    I express [quote] I go-to the market [end quote].

selma'o LUhU (Chapter 6)
Elidable terminator for LAhE and NAhE+BO. Indicates the end of a qualified sumti. mi viska la'e lu barda gerku li'u lu'u    I see the-referent-of [quote] big dog [end quote] [end ref] I saw “Big Dog” [not the words, but a book or movie].

selma'o MAI (Chapter 18, Chapter 19)
When suffixed to a number or string of letter words, produces a free modifier which serves as an index number within a text. pamai mi pu klama le zarci 1-thly, I [past] go to-the market. First, I went to the market.

selma'o MAhO (Chapter 18)
Produces a mathematical operator from a letter or other operand. Terminated by TEhU. See VUhU. ma'o fy. boi xy. [operator] f x    f(x)

selma'o ME (Chapter 5, Chapter 18)
Produces a tanru unit from a sumti, which is applicable to the things referenced by the sumti. Terminated by MEhU. ta me la ford. karce That is-a-Ford-type car That’s a Ford car.

selma'o MEhU (Chapter 5)
The elidable terminator for ME. Indicates the end of a sumti converted to a tanru unit. ta me mi me'u zdani That’s a me type of house.

selma'o MOI (Chapter 5, Chapter 18)
Suffixes added to numbers or other quantifiers to make various numerically-based selbri. la djan. joi la frank. cu bruna remei John in-a-mass-with Frank are-a-brother-type-of twosome. John and Frank are two brothers.

selma'o MOhE (Chapter 18)
Produces a mathematical operand from a sumti; used to make dimensioned units. Terminated by TEhU. li mo'e re ratcu su'i mo'e re ractu du li mo'e vo danlu The-number two rats plus two rabbits equals the-number four animals. 2 rats + 2 rabbits = 4 animals.

selma'o MOhI (Chapter 10)
A tense flag indicating movement in space, in a direction specified by a following FAhA cmavo. le verba mo'i ri'u cadzu le bisli The child [movement] [right] walks-on the ice. The child walks toward my right on the ice.

selma'o NA (Chapter 14, Chapter 15)
Contradictory negators, asserting that a whole bridi is false (or true). mi na klama le zarci It is not true that I go to the market. Also used to construct logical connective compound cmavo.

selma'o NAI (Chapter 14, Chapter 15)
Negates the previous word, but can only be used with certain selma'o as specified by the grammar.

selma'o NAhE (Chapter 15)
Scalar negators, modifying a selbri or a sumti to a value other than the one stated, the opposite of the one stated, etc. Also used with following BO to construct a sumti qualifier; see LAhE. ta na'e blanu zdani That is-a-non- blue house. That is a house which is other than blue.

selma'o NAhU (Chapter 18)
Creates a mathematical operator from a selbri. Terminated by TEhU. See VUhU. li na'u tanjo te'u vei pai fe'i re [ve'o] du li ci'i    The-number the-operator tangent ( π / 2 ) = the-number infinity. tan(π/2) = ∞

selma'o NIhE (Chapter 18)
Creates a mathematical operand from a selbri, usually a “ni” abstraction. Terminated by TEhU. li ni'e ni clani [te'u] pi'i ni'e ni ganra [te'u] pi'i         ni'e ni condi te'u du li ni'e ni canlu The-number quantity-of length times quantity-of width times quantity-of depth equals the-number quantity-of volume. Length × Width × Depth = Volume

selma'o NIhO (Chapter 19)
Marks the beginning of a new paragraph, and indicates whether it contains old or new subject matter.

selma'o NOI (Chapter 8)
Introduces relative clauses. The following bridi modifies the preceding sumti. Terminated by KUhO. See GOI. le zdani poi blanu cu cmalu The house which is blue is small.

selma'o NU (Chapter 11)
Abstractors which, when prefixed to a bridi, create abstraction selbri. Terminated by KEI. la djan. cu djica le nu sonci [kei] John desires the event-of being-a-soldier.

selma'o NUhA (Chapter 18)
Creates a selbri from a mathematical operator. See VUhU. li ni'umu cu nu'a va'a li ma'umu The-number -5 is-the-negation-of the-number +5

selma'o NUhI (Chapter 14, Chapter 16)
Marks the beginning of a termset, which is used to make simultaneous claims involving two or more different places of a selbri. Terminated by NUhU. mi klama nu'i ge le zarci le briju nu'u gi le zdani le ckule [nu'u]    I go [start] to-the market from-the office [joint] and to-the house from-the school.

selma'o NUhU (Chapter 14)
Elidable terminator for NUhI. Marks the end of a termset. mi klama nu'i ge le zarci le briju nu'u gi le zdani le ckule [nu'u]    I go [start] to-the market from-the office [joint] and to-the house from-the school.

selma'o PA (Chapter 18)
Digits and related quantifiers (some, all, many, etc.). Terminated by BOI. mi speni re ninmu I am-married-to two women.

selma'o PEhE (Chapter 14)
Precedes a logical or non-logical connective that joins two termsets. Termsets (see CEhE) are used to associate several terms for logical connectives, for equal quantifier scope, or for special constructs in tenses. mi ce'e do pe'e je la djan. ce'e la djeimyz. cu pendo I [,] you [joint] and John [,] James are-friends-of. I am a friend of you, and John is a friend of James.

selma'o PEhO (Chapter 18)
An optional signal of forethought mathematical operators, which precede their operands. Terminated by KUhE. li vo du li pe'o su'i reboi re    The-number four equals the-number [forethought] sum-of two two.

selma'o PU (Chapter 10)
Specifies simple time directions (future, past, or neither). mi pu klama le zarci I [past] go-to the market. I went to the market.

selma'o RAhO (Chapter 7)
The pro-bridi update flag: changes the meaning of sumti implicitly attached to a pro-bridi (see GOhA) to fit the current context rather than the original context. A: mi ba lumci le mi karce B: mi go'i    A: I [future] wash my car. B: I do-the-same-thing (i.e. wash A’s car). A: mi ba lumci le mi karce B: mi go'i ra'o    A: I [future] wash my car. B: I do-the-corresponding-thing (i.e. wash B’s car).

selma'o ROI (Chapter 10)
When suffixed to a number, makes an extensional tense (e.g. once, twice, many times). mi reroi klama le zarci I twice go-to the market.

selma'o SA (Chapter 19)
Erases the previous phrase or sentence. mi klama sa do klama le zarci I go, er, you go-to the market.

selma'o SE (Chapter 5, Chapter 9)
Converts a selbri, rearranging the order of places by exchanging the x1 place with a specified numbered place. le zarci cu se klama mi    The market is-gone-to by me. Also used in constructing connective and modal compound cmavo.

selma'o SEI (Chapter 19)
Marks the beginning of metalinguistic insertions which comment on the main bridi. Terminated by SEhU. la frank. prami sei gleki [se'u] la djein. Frank loves (he is happy) Jane.

selma'o SEhU (Chapter 19)
Elidable terminator for SEI and SOI. Ends metalinguistic insertions. la frank. prami sei gleki se'u la djein. Frank loves (he is happy) Jane.

selma'o SI (Chapter 19)
Erases the previous single word. mi si do klama le zarci I, er, you go to-the market.

selma'o SOI (Chapter 7)
Marks reciprocity between two sumti (like “vice versa” in English). mi prami do soi mi    I love you [reciprocally] me. I love you and vice versa.

selma'o SU (Chapter 19)
Closes and erases the entire previous discourse.

selma'o TAhE (Chapter 10)
A tense modifier specifying frequencies within an interval of time or space (regularly, habitually, etc.). le verba ta'e klama le ckule The child habitually goes to-the school.

selma'o TEI (Chapter 17)
Signals the beginning of a compound letter word, which acts grammatically like a single letter. Compound letter words end with the non-elidable selma'o FOI. tei .ebu .akut. bu foi ( “e” “acute” ) the letter “e” with an acute accent

selma'o TEhU (Chapter 18)
Elidable terminator for JOhI, MAhO, MOhE, NAhU, or NIhE. Marks the end of a mathematical conversion construct. li jo'i paboi reboi te'u su'i jo'i ciboi voboi du         li jo'i voboi xaboi The-number array (one, two) plus array (three, four) equals the-number array( four, six). (1,2) + (3,4) = (4,6)

selma'o TO (Chapter 19)
Left discursive parenthesis: allows inserting a digression. Terminated by TOI. doi lisas. mi djica le nu to doi frank. ko sisti toi do viska le mlatu O Lisa, I desire the event-of ( O Frank, [imperative] stop! ) you see the cat. Lisa, I want you to (Frank! Stop!) see the cat.

selma'o TOI (Chapter 19)
Elidable terminator for TO. The right discursive parenthesis. doi lisas. mi djica le nu to doi frank. ko sisti toi do viska le mlatu O Lisa, I desire the event-of ( O Frank, [imperative] stop! ) you see the cat. Lisa, I want you to (Frank! Stop!) see the cat.

selma'o TUhE (Chapter 19)
Groups multiple sentences or paragraphs into a logical unit. Terminated by TUhU. lo xagmau zo'u tu'e ganai cidja gi citno .i ganai vanju gi tolci'o [tu'u]   Is-best : [start] If food, then new. If wine, then old. As for what is best: if food, then new [is best]; if wine, then old [is best].

selma'o TUhU (Chapter 19)
Elidable terminator for TUhE. Marks the end of a multiple sentence group.

selma'o UI (Chapter 13)
Particles which indicate the speaker’s emotional state or source of knowledge, or the present stage of discourse. .ui la djan. klama [Happiness!] John is-coming. Hurrah! John is coming!

selma'o VA (Chapter 10)
A tense indicating distance in space (near, far, or neither). le nanmu va batci le gerku The man [medium distance] bites the dog. Over there the man is biting the dog.

selma'o VAU (Chapter 14)
Elidable terminator for a simple bridi, or for each bridi-tail of a GIhA logical connection. mi dunda le cukta [vau] gi'e lebna lo rupnu vau do [vau] I (give the book) and (take some currency-units) to/from you.

selma'o VEI (Chapter 18)
Left mathematical parenthesis: groups mathematical operations. Terminated by VEhO. li vei ny. su'i pa ve'o pi'i vei ny. su'i pa [ve'o] du         li ny. [bo] te'a re su'i re bo pi'i ny. su'i pa    The-number (“n” plus one) times (“n” plus one) equals the-number n-power-two plus two-times-“n” plus 1. (n + 1)(n + 1) = n$2$ + 2n + 1

selma'o VEhA (Chapter 10)
A tense indicating the size of an interval in space (long, medium, or short).

selma'o VEhO (Chapter 19)
Elidable terminator for VEI: right mathematical parenthesis. li vei ny. su'i pa ve'o pi'i vei ny. su'i pa [ve'o] du         li ny. [bo] te'a re su'i re bo pi'i ny. su'i pa    The-number (“n” plus one) times (“n” plus one) equals the-number n-power-two plus two-times-“n” plus 1. (n + 1)(n + 1) = n$2$ + 2n + 1

selma'o VIhA (Chapter 10)
A tense indicating dimensionality in space (line, plane, volume, or space-time interval). le verba ve'a vi'a cadzu le bisli The child [medium space interval] [2-dimensional] walks-on the ice. In a medium-sized area, the child walks on the ice.

selma'o VUhO (Chapter 8)
Attaches relative clauses or phrases to a whole (possibly connected) sumti, rather than simply to the leftmost portion of the sumti. la frank. ce la djordj. vu'o noi gidva cu zvati le kumfa Frank [in-set-with] George, which are-guides, are-in the room. Frank and George, who are guides, are in the room.

selma'o VUhU (Chapter 18)
Mathematical operators (e.g. +, −). See MAhO. li mu vu'u re du li ci    The-number 5 minus 2 equals the-number 3. 5 − 2 = 3

selma'o XI (Chapter 18)
The subscript marker: the following number or lerfu string is a subscript for whatever precedes it. xy. xi re    x sub 2 x$2$

selma'o Y (Chapter 19)
Hesitation noise: content-free, but holds the floor or continues the conversation. It is different from silence in that silence may be interpreted as having nothing more to say. doi .y. .y. .djan O, uh, uh, John!

selma'o ZAhO (Chapter 10)
A tense modifier specifying the contour of an event (e.g. beginning, ending, continuing). mi pu'o damba I [inchoative] fight. I’m on the verge of fighting.

selma'o ZEI (Chapter 4)
A morphological glue word, which joins the two words it stands between into the equivalent of a lujvo. ta xy. zei kantu kacma That is-an-(X - ray) camera. That is an X-ray camera.

selma'o ZEhA (Chapter 10)
A tense indicating the size of an interval in time (long, medium, or short). mi puze'a citka I [past] [short interval] eat. I ate for a little while.

selma'o ZI (Chapter 10)
A tense indicating distance in time (a long, medium or short time ago or in the future). mi puzi citka I [past] [short distance] eat. I ate a little while ago.

selma'o ZIhE (Chapter 8)
Joins multiple relative phrases or clauses which apply to the same sumti. Although generally translated with “and”, it is not considered a logical connective. mi ponse pa gerku ku poi blabi zi'e noi mi prami ke'a    I own one dog such-that it-is-white and such-that-incidentally I love it. I own a dog that is white and which, incidentally, I love. I own a white dog, which I love.

selma'o ZO (Chapter 19)
Single-word quotation: quotes the following single Lojban word. zo si cu lojbo valsi The-word “si” is-a-Lojbanic word.

selma'o ZOI (Chapter 19)
Non-Lojban quotation: quotes any text using a delimiting word (which can be any single Lojban word) placed before and after the text. The delimiting word must not appear in the text, and must be separated from the text by pauses. zoi kuot. Socrates is mortal .kuot. cu glico jufra The-text “Socrates is mortal” is-an-English sentence.

selma'o ZOhU (Chapter 16, Chapter 19)
Separates a logical prenex from a bridi or group of sentences to which it applies. Also separates a topic from a comment in topic/comment sentences. su'o da poi remna ro da poi finpe zo'u da prami de    For-at-least-one X which is-a-man, for-all Ys which are-fish : X loves Y     There is a man who loves all fish.