1.2. Definiteness
Definite noun phrases are nominal arguments that denote discourse referents with the property of being univocally identifiable, as shown in (a) or the property of being familiar to both the signer and the interlocutor. Entities are familiar when: i) they are co-present in the context where the utterance is pronounced, as shown in (b), ii) are culturally shared in the common ground of the signer and the addressee, as shown in (c), or iii) had been previously mentioned in the discourse, as shown in (d).
tl
a. moon SASS(L): โround_bigโ
โThe moon is completely full.โ
rel
b. keya ixa table CL(closed G): โput_on_aโ ixa atake1
โI took the key that was on the table.โ
top
c. president ixa person++b CL(5): โallโb bhatea
โAs for the President, the people hate him.โ
d. street man persona ixa stroll. suddenly CL(5): โcloud_overโ rain. man ixa take umbrella
โA man was walking on the street, when suddenly it clouded over and began to rain a lot. The man took an umbrella.โ