Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: ... > I mean, when you read "He sat on the chair" do you need > to look up the dictionary to discover that chairs can > have arm rests or not, they can be made of wood or > steel or uphostered springs, be on legs or coasters, > fixed or movable? If it mattered, a good author will > tell you, and if it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter.
But if in their dialects of English "chair" strongly implies a hard, straight-backed, no-arms sitting-device, they won't elaborate, even if it DOES matter, exactly because it's already implied in the word they used. Not sure if this is true of any dialect of English, today, but it might be in Italian (for "sedia", the exact translation of "chair"). So, you've just learned that "He" chose to sit in a chair rather than a sofa; depending on subtle nuances of the English dialect used (varying with time and space), this may have very different implications in defining the character and mood of this individual... Alex -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list