the power of "the"
Charles C Doyle
cdoyle at UGA.EDU
Mon Jun 6 16:46:09 UTC 2011
"Jealous about" sounds unidiomatic to me, and (therefore?) "jealousy about" seems awkward as a disambiguation.
--Charlie
________________________________________
From: American Dialect Society [ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU] on behalf of ronbutters at AOL.COM [ronbutters at AOL.COM]
Sent: Monday, June 06, 2011 11:44 AM
They mean the same thing to me: the wife felt the jealousy. If Othello felt the jealousy, it would say "about," not "of."
Which is not to say that "the" is not a powerful word:
I love the Charleston.
I love Charleston.
He hunted the dog.
He hunted dog,
Etc.
But we already knew that.
Sent from my iPad
On Jun 6, 2011, at 10:21 AM, Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at GMAIL.COM> wrote:
> Hardcore syntacticosemanticists may find this interesting.
>
> Contrast the meaning of these two sentences:
>
> A. Othello is brought down by jealousy of his wife.
>
> B. Othello is brought down by the jealousy of his wife.
>
> Different, virtually antithetical meanings. My unconscious must know why,
> even if the rest of me doesn't.
>
> Both sentences are theoretically "paraphrasable" as "Othello is brought down
> by his wife's jealousy," but that isn't even true!
>
> How describe this mysterious power of "the"? Is it widely recognized?
> Parallel examples?
>
> JL
>
>
>
> --
> "If the truth is half as bad as I think it is, you can't handle the truth."
>
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