When it comes to "It's raining," I prefer the "dummy subject" interpretation: "It" is all syntax and no reference. The verb carries all the referential meaning in the text. — Dawnstorm
That's because it's wrong. Terrapin Station seems to be confusing the main and auxiliary uses of the verb "to be". Aux use gives sub+aux verb+action verb (present continuous) as in "He is running". Main use can give attributive or identifying relations (with adjective or noun on right side respectively). Identifying relation illustrated by the sentence: "The meteorological condition is rain" is closest to the nonsense sentence he provided. — Baden
The meteorological conditions outside is raining.
That doesn't seem right. — Michael
It is obvious that you're wrong that the "it" in "It is raining" behaves like any other subject pronoun (or that all pronouns behave the same way). — Baden
I don't know where to start because every sentence in your comment has multiple problems and I don't want to write a thousand word reply. — Terrapin Station
That bluff won't work because I know what I'm talking about. — Baden
Substitute the noun you think is appropriate for the pronoun in the sentence I provided and the original one. It should be easy under your analysis. — Baden
See, for example: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dummy_pronoun — Baden
Likewise you could say something like "The meteorological condition outside is rain." — Terrapin Station
It's not a kindergartener issue. It's a serious linguistic issue. — Baden
I wouldn't say something a la "Every word must have a meaning" or "Every occurrence of 'it' must have a meaning" or anything like that, by the way--obviously not if my view is that the meaning of any x is determined simply by an individual assigning whatever meaning they do (or do not). So also, any particular occurrence of 'it' doesn't necessarily have any particular meaning, either. As I said in my first post in this thread: "(Well, or i should clarify 'What I'd normally take the subject to be in lieu of other information' . . . I dont want to suggest objectivist semantics.) " — Terrapin Station
'It is rain' — Baden
What I wanted to convey was that it's a matter of linguistic debate and analysis and there is a 'there' there in that context. There's no practical or philosophical 'there' there though that I see. — Baden
s "Is it rain" the same as "The meteorological condition outside is rain"? — Terrapin Station
What I feel... — Terrapin Station
Sure, and if you don't care you can keep responding to me. That would be a good way to show that you don't care/you're not interested. — Terrapin Station
Carry on then. I'll leave you to it. — Baden
Maybe that's what Baden was referring to. Why would you just be substituting the one phrase for the pronoun like that, like you're a robot? — Terrapin Station
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