10.15. Tenses in subordinate bridi

English has a set of rules, formally known as sequence of tense rules, for determining what tense should be used in a subordinate clause, depending on the tense used in the main sentence. Here are some examples:

Example 10.100. 

John says that George is going to the market.


Example 10.101. 

John says that George went to the market.


Example 10.102. 

John said that George went to the market.


Example 10.103. 

John said that George had gone to the market.


In Example 10.100 and Example 10.101, the tense of the main sentence is the present: says. If George goes when John speaks, we get the present tense is going (goes would be unidiomatic); if George goes before John speaks, we get the past tense went. But if the tense of the main sentence is the past, with said, then the tense required in the subordinate clause is different. If George goes when John speaks, we get the past tense went; if George goes before John speaks, we get the past-perfect tense had gone.

The rule of English, therefore, is that both the tense of the main sentence and the tense of the subordinate clause are understood relative to the speaker of the main sentence (not John, but the person who speaks Example 10.100 through Example 10.103).

Lojban, like Russian and Esperanto, uses a different convention. A tense in a subordinate bridi is understood to be relative to the tense already set in the main bridi. Thus Example 10.100 through Example 10.103 can be expressed in Lojban respectively thus:

Example 10.104. 

la .djan. ca cusku le se du'u
John [present] says the statement-that
la .djordj. ca klama le zarci
That-named George [present] goes-to the market.

Example 10.105. 

la .djan. ca cusku le se du'u
That-named John [present] says the statement-that
la .djordj. pu klama le zarci
That-named George [past] goes-to the market.

Example 10.106. 

la .djan. pu cusku le se du'u
That-named John [past] says the statement-that
la .djordj. ca klama le zarci
That-named George [present] goes-to the market.

Example 10.107. 

la .djan. pu cusku le se du'u
That-named John [past] says the statement-that
la .djordj. pu klama le zarci
That-named George [past] goes-to the market.

Probably the most counterintuitive of the Lojban examples is Example 10.106. The ca looks quite odd, as if George were going to the market right now, rather than back when John spoke. But this ca is really a ca with respect to a reference point specified by the outer pu. This behavior is the same as the additive behavior of multiple tenses in the same bridi, as explained in Section 10.13.

There is a special cmavo nau (of selma'o CUhE) which can be used to override these rules and get to the speaker's current reference point. (Yes, it sounds like English now.) It is not grammatical to combine nau with any other cmavo in a tense, except by way of a logical or non-logical connection (see Section 10.20). Here is a convoluted sentence with several nested bridi which uses nau at the lowest level:

Example 10.108. 

la .djan. pu cusku le se du'u
That-named John [past] says the statement-that
la .alis pu cusku le se du'u
That-named Alice [past] says the statement-that
la .djordj. pu cusku le se du'u
That-named George [past] says the statement-that
la .maris. nau klama le zarci
That-named Mary [now] goes-to the market.

John said that Alice had said that George had earlier said that Mary is now going to the market.


The use of nau does not affect sticky tenses.