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RE: [jboske] ti (was: RE: kau



On Mon, 16 Dec 2002, And Rosta wrote:

> I wrote:
> > Jordan:
>
> xod, I mean
>
> > > On Sun, 15 Dec 2002, Jordan DeLong wrote:
> > > > > "...they cannot refer to things that cannot be pointed at."
> > > >
> > > > "In written text, on the other
> > > > hand, the meaning of the ti-series is inherently vague; is the
> > writer to be
> > > > taken as pointing to something, and if so, to what? In all cases,
> > > what counts
> > > > as ``near'' and ``far away'' is relative to the current situation."
> > >
> > > There is no way you can possibly misinterpret the above to mean that ti
> > > can refer to unpointable things in the way that ko'a or da can
> >
> > It seems strange to me that "ti" should mean something different in
> > writing than in speech. One can point in writing (e.g. with arrows),
> > while if "ti" can point back to something nearby in the text
> > in writing, I can't see why it shouldn't be able to do so in speech
> >
> > So your reading of CLL may be scripturally licensed, but is somewhat
> > unfortunate
>
> That should be "Jordan's reading".
>


Huh? It probably should be my reading. Jordan is the one who, while he
admits that ti can't point to abstract things, nonetheless insists that
the distance or direction invoked can be "conceptual" (his word from post
1113). Therefore, I suppose that if his mother came to visit me, I would
still refer to her as ta, when talking to him on the phone, because after
all, she's conceptually closer to him than me, wherever she is physically.

I, on the other hand, take ti literally. It refers to physical objects and
physical distances relative to speaker and listeners. Originally mentioned
in the context of possible cmavo for a variable that can take its meaning
from its bridi position (the way da does) without needing to be bound
explicitly the way ko'a does (according to some people), I reject it
because of its limited, physical nature. (If it wasn't being suggested for
the role, why else would it have been mentioned in a discussion explicitly
seeking a variable cmavo with certain qualifications?)

You seem to be agreeing with him, or at least in a more conservative
interpretation, using ti to override di'u/de'u.



-- 
jipno se kerlo
re mei re mei degji kakne