Active Users:1120 Time:23/11/2024 12:12:27 AM
That's hyperbole if I ever heard it. Tom Send a noteboard - 28/01/2012 08:29:20 PM
First, "y'all" is incorrect because "you" is already grammatically plural. "You all" can be used to resolve ambiguity or provide emphasis, as in "You all can go to the movies" (i.e., otherwise the people being addressed might have thought only some of them could go).

We are all well aware that language changes. However, there is a distinction between natural shifts in language over time, which reflect the living and changing nature of language, and politically motivated attempts at artificially changing the language, which smack of Soviet utopianism.

"Cripple" became "handicapped", then "disabled", then "differently abled". The last is a bullshit expression because it means nothing - everyone's abilities are different from those of anyone else.

Likewise, the use of "professional" in this context obliterates any meaning, both of the word itself and the context it is supposed to provide. "Waste management professional" rather than "garbage man" is not only unnecessarily long, but it really doesn't convey what the person does. "Professional" is abused and misused in quite this way, and it's done because certain people feel uncomfortable saying "garbage man" or "secretary" or "stewardess" because they feel that the terms sound derogatory.

It has nothing to do with "honorifics" and everything to do with liberal discomfort. No one is demeaning anyone by saying that they shouldn't call themselves a "professional". Some of the most successful people aren't/weren't (Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg, Oprah Winfrey, Sam Walton - the list goes on and on and on).

It's just about not warping and contorting the English language.
Political correctness is the pettiest form of casuistry.

ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius

Ummaka qinnassa nīk!

*MySmiley*
Reply to message
Profession/professional - 28/01/2012 06:22:40 AM 710 Views
well from this side of it... - 28/01/2012 08:45:08 AM 340 Views
I think your point is valid. - 28/01/2012 10:23:37 AM 352 Views
I'm not sure I agree with that. - 28/01/2012 10:59:31 AM 362 Views
You can disagree with the English language all you like. - 28/01/2012 03:29:05 PM 493 Views
Well. - 28/01/2012 06:11:26 PM 341 Views
I don't see much point in trying to preserve the archaic use of the word - 28/01/2012 01:54:53 PM 411 Views
Ha! That's silly. - 28/01/2012 03:32:01 PM 365 Views
No it is silly to think you can make a living language stagnant - 28/01/2012 05:38:27 PM 358 Views
That's hyperbole if I ever heard it. - 28/01/2012 08:29:20 PM 334 Views
True story.... - 28/01/2012 09:11:10 PM 406 Views
You're absolutely correct. It's just society trying to make shit jobs sound better. - 28/01/2012 03:25:48 PM 367 Views
Yeah, it's important to denote which occupations demand extraordinary, society-affecting judgement. - 28/01/2012 05:19:30 PM 446 Views
at this point, though, I think teaching should be professionalized - 28/01/2012 05:37:46 PM 416 Views
that will be hard for them to do - 28/01/2012 05:44:53 PM 351 Views
depends on the teacher you talk to. - 28/01/2012 07:11:58 PM 332 Views
That is a good point. - 28/01/2012 08:16:38 PM 323 Views
You need a license, don't you? *NM* - 28/01/2012 08:15:10 PM 156 Views
I believe the actual term used is "certification" - 28/01/2012 08:49:23 PM 324 Views
We have a certification process that any college grad with common sense could pass. - 28/01/2012 10:36:29 PM 364 Views
Perhaps not, then. - 28/01/2012 11:12:33 PM 315 Views
in my mind teaching is indeed a profession. *NM* - 28/01/2012 08:25:18 PM 225 Views
and there is the problem - 29/01/2012 02:59:15 AM 424 Views
A teacher must have a collage degree and not only that but - 29/01/2012 11:07:51 AM 338 Views
oh I disagree with the strict code of conduct part - 29/01/2012 05:57:35 PM 344 Views
Yes! - 28/01/2012 09:25:03 PM 388 Views
Connotations change. Deal with it. *NM* - 28/01/2012 10:29:20 PM 324 Views

Reply to Message