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Re: Tense on Nouns

From:Brian B <caol.kailash@...>
Date:Sunday, February 18, 2007, 16:56
I never thought of it that way that it'd have that consequence. But I
suppose you're right and I really like that idea. Though at the same time,
the subject still maintains some sort of unity throughout.

Cheers and thanks for the insight!
B

It seems to me that you don't need both of them, at least mostly.
> Anyhow I think people who mark time on nouns get a different > perspective from those who mark it on verbs. Perhaps it gives them a > more continuous perspective. What we others do is to picture an event > before we relate to it. That picture of the event is pretty much > timeless, extracted from time. In the other point of view you have an > emphasis on the entity the event happens to, an entity which is not > timeless, but is subject to change, creation or annihilation any > time. Somehow I wonder what would have been the effect if Greek > marked tense on nouns in Plato's time... > > LEF >
-- "Speak the truth. Practice virtue. Do not neglect to study every day. Do not neglect truth, virtue, studying or teaching.... Be one to whom your mother is a god...your teacher is a god, a guest is like a god.... Give with faith...give liberally, give with modesty...give with sympathy.... This is the command. This is the teaching. This is the secret of the Veda...." (Taittiriya Upanishad i.11.1-6)