Another application of non-logical tense connection is to talk about sub-events of events. Consider a six-shooter: a gun which can fire six bullets in succession before reloading. If I fire off the entire magazine twice, I can express the fact in Lojban thus:    
      
      
      
      It would be confusing, though grammatical, to run the
      reroi
      and the
      xaroi
      directly together. However, the non-logical connective
      pi'u
      expresses a Cartesian product (also known as a cross product) of two sets. In this case, there is a set of two firings each of which is represented by a set of six shots, for twelve shots in all (hence the name
      “product”
      : the product of 2 and 6 is 12). Its use specifies very precisely what occurs.
    
      
      In fact, you can specify strings of interval properties and event contours within a single tense without the use of a logical or non-logical connective cmavo. This allows tenses of the type: