Juzam Djinn
Commodore
I am writing an essay on deixis--reference by means of an expression whose interpretation is relative to the (usually) extralinguistic context of the utterance. Personal pronouns like "I" and "you," for example, are deictic words--their meaning depends on who is speaking, and who is being spoken to.
I want to illustrate this with the scene from "I, Mudd" in which Spock says "I love you" to one Alice robot, and "But I hate you" to another.
Can anyone tell me:
1. What were the numbers of the Alice-robots to which he spoke?
2. What was the rest of the dialogue before the two Alice-robots froze up?
I want to illustrate this with the scene from "I, Mudd" in which Spock says "I love you" to one Alice robot, and "But I hate you" to another.
Can anyone tell me:
1. What were the numbers of the Alice-robots to which he spoke?
2. What was the rest of the dialogue before the two Alice-robots froze up?