On May 31, 2019, at 09:21, Alan Anderson <qunchuy@alcaco.net> wrote:
Homophones permit ambiguity wherever they appear. They aren’t good examples of a potential for ambiguity due to the grammar.
Good point. The grammar is still a factor with homophone ambiguity, though, as it needs to allow multiple homophones that are different parts of speech in the same position. In both of the examples I gave, the homophones could have either been a noun acting as the subject of the sentence {'e'} refers to, or an adverbial modifying the sentence whose object is {'e'}. I think even without involving a homophone one would need to exploit the same positional ambiguity, e.g. {Dor Hoghvam 'e' vIHaj} - “I dread that this week ends” OR “This week I dread that it (some other time period or event) ends” I can’t think of other verbs besides {Dor} that can take a noun phrase that can act as a time stamp as their subject off the top of my head. Or maybe an ambiguity involving a verb of speech marking a quotation: {jatlh naH jajmeywIj 'e' vIQoy} - “I heard her say ‘my youth’” OR “In my youth I heard her speak”