so'e'u PA4 experimental cmavo

digit/number: n (default: 1 or 1/2 atomic units as the case may be) more than half; barely a majority; a slight majority.

n is specified by the following digits; for example: "so'e'upare" means "12 more than the floor of half" (note that atomicity of the members of the quantified set is implicitly assumed by n being an integer). When the quantified set has well-defined atomic members (such as people in a population) and is finite and non-empty (hereinafter Case #1), and when n is the default value aforementioned, then this word refers to the smallest cardinality which strictly exceeds half of the cardinality of the original set; if the quantified set is continuous (hereinafter Case #2), then this word refers to what may be conceptually captured by "(1/2) + n \varepsilon", where n is as specified in the definition supra (default: 1) and where \varepsilon is an infinitesimal or similar. Without a preceding "pi" or "pi'e", the output/referent quantity in Case #1 refers to an integer which happens to equal n more than the floor of half of the cardinality of the total applicable set which is being quantified; with "pi" or "pi'e" preceding this word, the quantification is converted to a relative count, which is conceptually and approximately "50-percent + n \varepsilon" (note that exact value of N will affect the exact presentation of the proper mathematical formula), where the cardinality of the referent quantified set is N and where \varepsilon either denotes 1/N in Case #1 or is as described supra in Case #2. This word is good for discussion of, for example, elections which operate and decide outcomes by bare, absolute majority. See also: "so'e".


In notes:

so'e'i (exp!)
number/digit: a qualifying majority or a defined/relevant supermajority.
so'e'o (exp!)
digit/number: a strong/substantial/decisive majority.
so'i'a (exp!)
digit/number: slightly less than a minimal-majority; the maximal-minority.