U
Unknown
Guest
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Sorry, I'd need a retainer for that.
which explains a lot.
fb.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
Sorry, I'd need a retainer for that.
originally posted by SFJoe:
There are numerous similar examples, it's almost its own branch of humor.
The River Avon, for instance, was the response to a similar question of "what's that?" and means the River River.
"Welsh," OTOH, was imposed from the outside and means "foreigner," rather than "poor Celtic bastards we have just dispossessed and driven into a cold, wet corner of the island."
Or so I have been told.
Names assigned by other people are usually not good, e.g., Anasazi, Apache, Gypsy.originally posted by SFJoe:
"Welsh," OTOH, was imposed from the outside and means "foreigner," ...
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
...and when a writer uses the word "he," we all know what he means, so there is nothing obscurantist about it.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
if the author were intending to make that specific point it is very unlikely he would use the generic "man" to do so precisely because of that term's well-established gender-neutrality
originally posted by SFJoe:
Troglodyte is fine, too.