12

A previous question post by a new user was put on hold because five people, incuding me, voted it to be "primarily opinion-based" because (or despite) it asking about one line in a song. Therefore I am restating the original post in a way that focuses on grammar.

1 In the title of this blog post, "Loyalty points to nowhere," is points a verb or a noun?

2 Also, in the phrase "assessing points to nowhere," is points a verb or a noun? The complete sentence is "And assessing points to nowhere, leading every single one."

3 Does the grammar of "assessing loyalty points to nowhere" work the same as the grammar of "assessing points to nowhere"? Edit: Please briefly explain the grammar if there is difference.

Since adding a bounty, I have added the following question:

4 Does this interpretation of the phrase act in accord with the grammar of the phrase? Why or why not?

I don't want answers that are largely opinion based, but that are grammatically, linguistically, and contextually based. Thanks.

  • "Loyalty points" are nouns like frequent flier miles. The title "loyalty points to nowhere" suggests that the article is about how that you may accumulate frequent flier miles but not be able to use them. A big clue to this is the first sentence of the second paragraph: "Finally you have accumulated the required number of points...." in which points is unambiguously a noun.
  • – Adam Dec 24 '14 at 19:34
  • 1
  • This is still a poem. The usage of "points" is ambiguous, and it may or may not be a complete sentence. Since the context makes no sense, there is no way of determining whether it is a noun or a verb without either asking the songwriter or making interpretive assumptions (i.e. any answer you get will be opinion based.)
  • – Adam Dec 24 '14 at 19:36
  • 1
    @Adam Could you answer Question 3 that I added? And could you answer in an answer not in a comment, if you have the time? There's no hurry. Thanks –  Dec 24 '14 at 19:53