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 ra —
that, 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 ni— I want this. ·mi fia ra— I want that.
mi ho ra— I have that. (withhofrom 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 nara — that 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:
- I want that →
mi fia ra - That dog, not this cat →
ra cho, no ni mau - I have that →
mi ho ra - Back then →
ra wa
4 · Tonight's phrase
mi fia ra— I want that — the far-pointing twin ofmi 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?
Get one lesson delivered to your inbox each morning —subscribe free.