On 6/15/2019 2:07 PM, mayqel qunen'oS wrote:
Assume, there is an accident having taken place in a city.
The accident has been described, the people involved have been described, the city too, and then I want to say "far from them (from the accident and the people involved), there is a location".
Because, I *need* to continue the story by saying "at *that* location something else happened".
In this context, would the {chaHDaq Hopbogh Daq tu'lu'} be adequate for "far from them (the people involved), there was a location" , so then I will say {DaqvamDaq qaS ..} ?
Perhaps, I can just say {Daq HopDaq qaS...}.
But suppose that in the story, there is someone else involved too, who may not be near enough to the accident, so I *need* to specify near to *who* the location to be described next, actually is.
I'm not fully following you, but I don't think I need to. *Hop* is far from whatever the speaker, writer, listener, reader understand it to be from. Make it clear what it is far from, then say it's *Hop.* It would be a lot easier if you would just give us what you're working on, with the surrounding text for context. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name