5.12. Scalar negation of selbri
           
         
       
       Negation is too large and complex a topic to explain fully in this chapter; see 
    Chapter 15. In brief, there are two main types of negation in Lojban. This section is concerned with so-called 
    “scalar negation”, which is used to state that a true relation between the sumti is something other than what the selbri specifies. Scalar negation is expressed by cmavo of selma'o NAhE:
      
      
       meaning that Alice's relationship to the market is something other than that of walking there. But if the 
    ke were omitted, the result would be:
      
      
      meaning that Alice does go there in some way (klama is not negated), but by a means other than that of walking. 
    Example 5.116 negates both 
    cadzu and 
    klama, suggesting that Alice's relation to the market is something different from walkingly-going; it might be walking without going, or going without walking, or neither.
      Of course, any of the simple selbri types explained in 
    Section 5.9 may be used in place of brivla in any of these examples:
      
      
      Since only 
    pamoi is negated, an appropriate inference is that he is some other kind of speaker.
       Here is an assortment of more complex examples showing the interaction of scalar negation with 
    normal grouping, 
    ke and 
    ke'e grouping, logical connection, and sumti linked with 
    be and 
    bei:
      
      
      In 
    Example 5.119, 
    na'e negates only 
    sutra. Contrast 
    Example 5.120:
      
      
      Now consider 
    Example 5.121 and 
    Example 5.122, which are equivalent in meaning, but use 
    normal grouping and ke grouping respectively:
      
      
      
      
      However, if we place a na'e at the beginning of the selbri in both 
    Example 5.121 and 
    Example 5.122, we get different results:
      
      
      
      
      The difference arises because the 
    na'e in 
    Example 5.124 negates the whole construction from 
    ke to 
    ke'e, whereas in 
    Example 5.123 it negates 
    sutra alone.
       Beware of omitting terminators in these complex examples! If the explicit 
    
    ke'e is left out in 
    Example 5.124, it is transformed into:
      
      
      And if both 
    ke'e and 
    be'o are omitted, the results are even sillier:
      
      
      In 
    Example 5.126, everything after 
    be is a linked sumti, so the place structure is that of 
    
    cadzu, whose x2 place is the surface walked upon. It is less than clear what an 
    “arm-type goer” might be. Furthermore, since the x3 place has been occupied by the linked sumti, the 
    
    le zarci following the selbri falls into the nonexistent x4 place of 
    cadzu. As a result, the whole example, though grammatical, is complete nonsense. (The bracketed Lojban words appear where a fluent Lojbanist would understand them to be implied.)
       Finally, it is also possible to place 
    na'e before a 
    gu'e…gi logically connected tanru construction. The meaning of this usage has not yet been firmly established.