marcin
(Marcin)
#1
over Italian. It is more proper because it is
more concrete, because it has not been used
by sublime minds for many centuries for
metaphysical speculations and every word
gives immediately the idea of the thing it
represents, without having other
representations weaken that certainty.”
Pascarella speaks of “dialectal
language...more proper and more concrete
than italian,” that is, he insists on the
possibility (certainty, in his case) that the
Roman dialect can contain in the sounds the
precise idea of the thing uttered by virtue
also of the fact that it still has not been
weakened, contaminated or rendered vague
by tradition. The question here becomes
interesting and lays the foundation for the
ideas that Loi and Giacomini have been
advancing for some years. Which means that
Pascarella, whatever the achievements of his