Banno         
         Pointing is a use. — Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu         
         
Isaac         
         ↪Banno
What other uses does a word have? — Harry Hindu
— Harry Hindu
bongo fury         
         Kids arrive at five by playing with beans, moving them around, sharing them, sorting the beans from the marbles, cooking them, embedded number in their lives.
Pointing is a gross oversimplification. — Banno
↪Banno Hello.
This is a scribble or sound used to point to the start of communication, — Harry Hindu
The "Na" in...
" Na na na na na na na na na na na na na " - My Chemical Romance. — Isaac
Streetlight         
         
Isaac         
         "Na" in the musical work cited appears to exemplify (point up) qualities of articulation in an electric guitar riff, etc. — bongo fury
Mac         
         
Harry Hindu         
         What makes some scribble or sound a word, and not just a scribble or sound?This sounds like a fun game. We say a word and Harry tells us what it's pointing to. Can I try one...
The "Na" in...
" Na na na na na na na na na na na na na " - My Chemical Romance. — Isaac
Isaac         
         What makes some scribble or sound a word, and not just a scribble or sound? — Harry Hindu
Banno         
         
Banno         
         
bert1         
         There must, therefore, be a way of understanding a word that is not given by providing its definition.
Now this seems quite obvious; and yet so many begin their discussion with "let's first define our terms". — Banno
Banno         
         Offering a definition, at least in part, is informing people of how a word is intended to be used. — bert1
Banno         
         
bongo fury         
         
Banno         
         But then say you areObviously plenty of words in most sentences, and all in some, don't point directly or at all. — bongo fury
SO we are both agin definitions; we agree that not all words point; we agree that some words do indeed point.For pointing, agin definitions. — bongo fury
bongo fury         
         Harry suggests that words are to be understood by determining to what they point. The reasonable response is to point out, as I and others have done, that there are words that do not seem to point. — Banno
bert1         
         The question to hand is "which is to be the master?"; and my answer is, the use is the master of the definition. — Banno
apokrisis         
         Offering a definition, at least in part, is informing people of how a word is intended to be used. — bert1
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