Sujet : Re: Next ambiguity De : kehoea (at) *nospam* parhasard.net (Aidan Kehoe) Groupes :sci.lang Date : 21. Jul 2024, 19:50:56 Autres entêtes Message-ID :<875xsy4m0f.fsf@parhasard.net> References :1 User-Agent : Gnus/5.101 (Gnus v5.10.10) XEmacs/21.5-b35 (Linux-aarch64)
Ar an chéad lá is fiche de mí Iúil, scríobh Athel Cornish-Bowden:
> I'm wondering how common ambiguity in the word "next" is. My first wife, when I > was driving and she was giving directions, would say, for example, "take the > next right", which we would understand differently; for me the next right would > mean right at the intersection we are just coming to. For her it meant the one > after it. There was a similar ambiguity for weeks. If I say "next week" I mean > the week that starts tomorrow, Monday 22nd July: for her it would mean the week > that starts on the 29th. > > In case it's relevant, I mention that my ex-wife is from California, one of the > few native adult Californians that I ever came across when I lived in > California.
I think she was just wrong. “This right” vs “next right” is a useful distinction to have, and she didn’t have it. This ignores the what-is-the-first-day-of-the-week other ambiguity of your second example.
An awkward thing to look into for evidence, even in these days of large corpora.
-- ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out / How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’ (C. Moore)