← All lessonsLesson 36 of 76

This and that

You've said this since Lesson 6 (mi fia ni). Today you get its partner — that, the one over there — so you can point near and far.


1 · Say this

mi fia ra (mee · FEE-ah · rah) I want that.

You know all of this but one word: mi fia is I want (Lesson 6). The new piece is rathat, the thing further off. It's the far-pointing partner of ni (this, close at hand).


2 · A closer look: near and far

Amatu Says Means
ni "nee" this (near)
ra "rah" that (far)

ra drops into every spot ni lives in:

mi fia niI want this. · mi fia raI want that.

mi ho raI have that. (with ho from Lesson 34)

Point it at anything in the room. That dog over there? ra cho (that dog). The cat right here? ni mau (this cat) — cho and mau were your pets back in Lesson 32. The person across the way? ra narathat person (nara, Lesson 16).

ra reaches into time, too — pair it with wa (time, Lesson 27): since ni is near and ra is far, ni wa is now (this-time) and ra wa is back then (that-time, far off).


🧭 Why it's built this way ni and ra mark the two ends of distance — here-near versus there-far — for things and for time alike. Near is ni, far is ra; point with the one that fits and the listener knows which you mean.


⚠️ Watch out ra is a single light tap — a soft Spanish-style r, the vowel a clean "ah." Don't harden it into an English "raw," and don't roll it long; one quick beat.


3 · Your turn

Out loud:

  1. I want thatmi fia ra
  2. That dog, not this catra cho, no ni mau
  3. I have thatmi ho ra
  4. Back thenra wa

4 · Tonight's phrase

mi fia raI want that — the far-pointing twin of mi fia ni, I want this.


30-second check

Cover the page. (1) Say I want that. (2) Say I have that. (3) Tell yourself which word is near and which is far. Three for three? You can now point at anything — close or distant — and make clear which one you mean.

⬅️ Back: Lesson 35 — Recap · ➡️ Next: Lesson 37 — Where is it?