"It" is "the meteorological conditions outside." — Terrapin Station
Anyway, if we were avoiding semantics and ONLY talking about grammar per se, then obviously the subject of "It is raining" is "It." — Terrapin Station
As soon as you ask "What does 'it' refer to" you're doing semantics. — Terrapin Station
Semantically, "It" is "the meteorological conditions outside." — Terrapin Station
If a sentence is defined as a complete thought, then it would seem it ought to have a subject, just as a thought must be about something. But the subjects needn't be voiced. Many imperatives ("Do this..,") have an unspoken but understood subject. "Duck!" and "Run!" are other examples.Cool. Looks good. But is this an observation, so that it just so happens that all sentences have a subject; or is it a definition, as in, if it doesn't have a subject, it's not a sentence? — Banno
If I say, "I looked, and it is not raining," we may properly assume I looked at "it" and made that determination, which means that "it" is not a dummy pronoun, but something that can be seen and assessed. — Hanover
“The rain it raineth on the just
And also on the unjust fella;
But chiefly on the just, because
The unjust hath the just’s umbrella.” — Charles Bowen
Again, on my view, re semantics, terms mean, terms refer to whatever individuals consider them to mean/refer to. In other words, meaning is subjective. Contra Putnam, it is "just in the head." — Terrapin Station
it's referentially empty and only fills a function. — Dawnstorm
Again, on my view, re semantics, terms mean, terms refer to whatever individuals consider them to mean/refer to. In other words, meaning is subjective. Contra Putnam, it is "just in the head." — Terrapin Station
"It" from above, 3. used in the normal subject position in statements about time, distance, or weather.
"it's half past five" or 5. used to emphasize a following part of a sentence. — Bitter Crank
"It" is indexical because the meaning depends on the context. "It" doesn't have a "fixed" meaning like "cat," say. Like all indexicals, the reference of the term can be completely different in different contexts, they function more like variables. — Terrapin Station
It does if you think about it that way. — Terrapin Station
What way? As an indexical. That's what we're talking about. — Terrapin Station
But if "It" in "It's raining," were indexical, then you couldn't be arguing that "it" refers to the weather or anything, because you couldn't tell what it was referring to until you had a context. — Dawnstorm
As I said, ""What I'd normally take the subject to be in lieu of other information" — Terrapin Station
Again, I'm guessing the context. It's context-dependent. — Terrapin Station
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